Making Visible the Problem of Invisibility more(2009) 83(10) Law Institute Journal 52 |
32 views |
Indigenous Women & Human Rights, Indigenous Peoples Rights, Indigenous Studies, Human Rights Law, and Human Rights
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE; HUMAN RIGHTS
Difficulties experienced by Indigenous people in proving their identity or
obtaining a birth certificate may in part be remedied through using the
Victorian Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities. By Dr Paula Gerber
^T" ~T ho as a child did not
% \ I sometimes dream of the
\/ \/ possibilities of invisibil-
y ▼ ity? For that matter, who
as an adult has not also sometimes wished it
upon him or herself?"1
In his book The Invisible Man, HG Wells
weaves an intriguing tale of a scientist who
has made himself invisible. Wells, in com-
mon with many children and adults, was
fascinated with the idea of invisibility.
Unfortunately, for many Indigenous people
born in Victoria, being invisible is a day-to-
day occurrence and, just like the protagonist
in The Invisible Man, they find the reality of
invisibility far less enjoyable than the fantasy.
The invisibility they face is not physical invis-
ibility, but rather legal invisibility, stemming
from an inability to establish their identity.
The invisibility that Indigenous people
suffer was recently highlighted when par-
ticipants in the Gippsland East Aboriginal
Driver Education Project could not get a
driver's licence - not because they could not
pass the test, or safely drive a car, but rather
because they could not produce the proof of
identity documentation required by VicRoads
as a condition precedent to obtaining a driv-
er's licence.2 Sixty of the participants did not
have a birth certificate, and the births of 10 of
these had never been registered.
It is well known that there is significant
under-registration of births in developing
countries; indeed, in sub-Saharan Africa
more than 70 per cent of births are not regis-
tered.3 What is less well known is the problem
of under-registration of Indigenous births in
our own country. This is evidenced by the fact
that the Australian Institute of Health and
Welfare recorded 9900 births to Indigenous
mothers in 2005, yet only 8600 such births
were registered.4 This article examines how
the birth registration system in Victoria con-
tributes to the invisibility of Indigenous
people, and considers whether the Charter
of Human Rights and Responsibilities Act 2006
(Vic) (Charter) can be used to redress this
problem.
The problem
Birth registration can be described as a "gate-
way" event, conferring on a person the first
official recognition by the state of their exist-
ence, and commencinga relationship between
the individual and the state that continues for
the life of that person. In Victoria, the process
of birth registration and the issuing of birth
certificates is administered by the Registry of
Births, Death and Marriages (BDM) by vir-
tue of the Registrar's powers under the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996 (Vic).
It essentially entails a two-step process;
• submitting a request that a birth be regis-
tered; and
• ordering a copy of the birth certificate and
paying the fee.
52 L I J OCTOBER 2009
Thus, a birth certificate is not automatically
issued at the time of registration to the person
registering the birth. A separate application
form must be completed and a fee paid.5
To date, there has been no empirical
research undertaken to assess the magnitude
of the problem of non-registration of births
of Indigenous children in Victoria. However,
there is anecdotal evidence that it may be a sig-
nificant problem. The Gippsland Community
Legal Service has reported that many of their
Indigenous clients, because they cannot pro-
duce a birth certificate, have experienced
difficulties in obtaining a tax file number,
registering to vote, opening a bank account,
obtaining social security benefits, enrolling
children in school, and/or getting a driver's
licence.6 Inquiries undertaken by the legal
service revealed that this legal invisibility
arises from either of two distinct causes:
• the birth was never registered; or
• the birth was registered but the parents
did not seek a birth certificate at the time
of registration, and now a certificate cannot
be obtained, because the person seeking
the certificate either cannot afford the fee
or is unable to produce the proof of identity
documentation required by the Registrar
of BDM.
Birth not registered
In Victoria last year, approximately 2.5
per cent of all births went unregistered. It
is believed that the majority of these were
Indigenous. The research has not yet been
undertaken to definitively explain these
non-registrations, but initial investigations
suggest they may be due to:
• lack of confidence in dealing with the
authorities;
• marginalisation from mainstream services;
• lack of understanding of the requirements
and benefits of birth registration;
• poor literacy levels; and
• low priority accorded to birth registration.7
Developing and delivering an educa-
tion campaign designed to raise awareness
of the advantages of birth registration, and
taking steps to provide Indigenous commu-
nities with the skills they need to navigate
the birth registration process, would help
overcome these obstacles. Information ses-
sions for Indigenous people were organised
by the BDM in 13 rural and regional areas
in May and June 2009.8 It remains to be
seen whether this initiative will be success-
ful in increasing the birth registrations of
Indigenous children.
Birth registered, but no
certificate issued
Many Indigenous parents do not complete the
second step in the birth registration process,
i.e. they do not order a copy of the birth certif-
icate of their child. This may be because they
cannot afford to pay the fee, or they do not
see the need for acquiring such a document.
It appears that many Indigenous people only
seek a copy of their birth certificate when they
find they need to prove their legal identity, e.g.
when they wish to get a driver's licence or
open a bank account. This is when the prob-
lems arise.
The first problem an Indigenous person
may encounter when seeking a copy of their
birth certificate is that they do not know, or
have incorrect information regarding, the
details of their birth. It can be an extremely
time-consuming and expensive exercise to try
and locate a birth certificate when the person
does not know the precise date of the birth or
the name under which they were registered.
ILLUSTRATION SONIA KRETSCHMAR
LIJ OCTOBER 2009 53
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE; HUMAN RIGHTS
The second obstacle they are likely to encoun-
ter is in satisfying the onerous proof of
identity requirements mandated by theBDM.
Those requirements currently involve pro-
ducing three forms of identification from
within prescribed classes of documents.
Some of the documents that are acceptable
forms of ID (for example a driver's licence)
can only be obtained if the person already
has a birth certificate, making the satisfac-
tion of this requirement extremely difficult.
Thus, a vicious circle is created whereby the
Registrar will not provide the birth certifi-
cate unless the person seeking it can produce
forms of ID that can only be acquired with a
birth certificate!
Furthermore, if the person seeking a
copy of their birth certificate cannot person-
ally attend the BDM registry office - and the
only Victorian one is in Melbourne, thereby
discriminating against people in rural and
regional Victoria - then the ID documents
must be certified by a police officer. Given that
police and Indigenous communities often have
a tense relationship, this requirement poses
yet another barrier to Indigenous people try-
ing to get a copy of their birth certificate.
Even if an Indigenous person can satisfy
the proof of ID requirements, they may not
be able to afford to pay the prescribed fee.
Although the Registrar has legislative power
to waive fees,9 this discretion is rarely exer-
cised.10 The power to waive fees is not widely
publicised by the BDM, and as a result many
people do not know that they can apply for
a waiver. It has been noted that one strat-
egy for increasing birth registrations is for
governments to "revise applicable laws or
regulations with a view toward simplifying
the process of birth registration, [and] remov-
ing existing economic barriers (e.g. charges
for birth certificates)".11
The waiver of fees for those suffering
financial distress is a simple way to help over-
come one of the obstacles that contributes to
the legal invisibility of Indigenous people in
this state.
The solution?
One of the questions that needs to be asked
is: do the policies and procedures of the BDM
comply with the provisions of the Charter? By
virtue of the Charter, the Registrar of BDMs
is a public authority (s4), and is therefore
required to perform official duties in a way
that is compatible with the human rights set
out in that legislation (s38).
The intention of Parliament when enacting
the Charter was that it give effect to the rights
set out in the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights (ICCPR).12 However, not
all the rights in the ICCPR have been included
in the Charter. Specifically, Article 24(2) was
not included in the Charter. This article pro-
vides that "every child shall be registered
immediately after birth". The Consultation
Committee that drafted the Charter declared
that this provision was deliberately left out,
noting that:
"The Committee has not included the arti-
cle 24 provisions concerning the right to birth
registration and to a name. While these rights
were more relevant in the post World War
II context in which the ICCPR was drafted,
they are less relevant for inclusion in a mod-
ern Victorian Charter."13
This indicates that the committee was out
of touch with the plight that many Indig-
enous people face when it comes to birth
registration, with the Victorian Indigenous
community being the ones that suffer for that
mistake.
Section 44 of the Charter requires that:
"(1) The Attorney-General must cause a
review to be made of the first 4 years of
operation of this Charter and must cause
a copy of a report of the review to be laid
before each House of Parliament on or
before 1 October 2011.
(2) A review under subsection (1) must
include consideration as to whether
(a) additional human rights should be
included as human rights under this
Charter, including but not limited to,
rights under ... the Convention on the
Rights of the Child..."
As part of this review process the Attorney- '
General should consider including a section
giving effect to Article 24(1) of the ICCPR,
or alternatively giving effect to Article 7 of
the Convention on the Rights of the Child,
which is in similar terms. The incorporation
of such a provision would be recognition that
the right to birth registration and a birth cer-
tificate are still live issues for the Indigenous
community, and should therefore form part
of the Charter.
Although the Charter fails to include an
express right to birth registration and a birth
certificate, other rights in the Charter may
\ be useful tools in the battle to overcome this
; problem. For example, s8(l) states that "every
person has the right to recognition as a per-
son before the law". This means that a person
has a right not to be legally invisible. The ina-
; bility to obtain a birth certificate means that a
: person is unable to enjoy all the rights of citi-
zenship and is unable to be fully recognised
as a person before the law. The Registrar of
BDMs, by failing to facilitate the legal rec-
ognition of all persons born in Victoria, is
arguably in breach of s8(l).14
Section 17 of the Charter may also be rele-
vant. It states:
"(1) Families are the fundamental group
unit of society and are entitled to be protected
by society and the State.
(2) Every child has the right, without dis-
crimination, to such protection as is in his or
her best interests and is needed by him or her
by reason of being a child."
There are many services that the state pro-
vides to children because they are needed
by virtue of the fact that they are children.
Education and health care are two examples
that readily spring to mind. If children are
unable to enrol in a school, or receive a medi-
cal service such as vaccination,15 because they
cannot prove their identity, this may amount
to a breach of the right enunciated in sl7.16
Thus the absence of an express right to
birth registration in the Charter is not the
end of the matter. The Registrar of BDMs
may be breaching other rights in the Charter
by not facilitating the birth registration of
Indigenous children and/or the obtaining of
their birth certificate.
More research is required to identify the
cause and extent of the problem of legal invisi-
bility being experienced by many Indigenous
Victorians. But what is clear, at this early
stage of investigation, is that the legal invisi-
bility that some Indigenous people, including
children, are enduring constitutes a breach of
their human rights that needs to be remedied
sooner rather than later.
A good starting point would be for the
Registrar of BDMs to adopt a more flexible
approach in dealing with the Indigenous com-
munity - in terms of both fees and proof of
ID requirements. The tragic bushfires earlier
this year demonstrated that the Registrar is
capable of such flexibility. The Registry devel-
oped a special application form to facilitate
victims of the bushfires obtaining a copy of
54 LIJ OCTOBER 2009
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE; HUMAN RIGHTS
their birth or marriage certificate. Applicants
were required to provide only minimal infor-
mation, and when it came to proof of ID, the
form merely stated: "If'you have any identifi-
cation documents please complete" (emphasis
added) and then had a space for the applicant
to write in their driver's licence number,
passport number or Medicare number. The
applicant then had to declare that the infor-
mation in the form was true and correct, and
that they understood that giving false and
misleading information is a serious offence.
There was no requirement for payment of a
fee. It is recommended that the Registrar con-
sider adopting a similarly flexible approach
when it comes to Indigenous Australians
seeking a copy of their birth certificate.
The author also recommends that the
Victorian government, as part of its four-
year review of the Charter, consider enacting
an amendment that gives all Victorians an
express right to have their birth registered,
and a birth certificate issued to them. •
DR PAULA GERBER is a deputy director of the Castan
Centre for Human Rights Law, a senior lecturer at the
Monash University Law School, and a sessional member
at VCAT, She has a special interest in human rights law,
in particular children's rights.
1. Christopher Priest, 'Introduction' to HG Wells' The
Invisible Man ([1897] 2005), Penguin Books, p. xvii.
2. "Aborigines lack proof of identity", The Age, 23
January 2009.
3. Jonathan Todres, "Birth registration: an essential first
step toward ensuring the rights of all children" (2003)
10 Human Rights Brief 32.
4. Note 2 above.
5. At the time of writing, the fee is $26.60.
6. Gippsland Community Legal Service, The Koori ID
Project, May 2008, p. 3.
7. Joel Orenstein, "The difficulties faced by Aboriginal
Victorians in obtaining identification" (2008) 7(8)
Indigenous Law Bulletin 14.
8. http://online.justice.vic.gov.au/CA2574F700805DE7/
page/About+us-News+archive?OpenDocument8<l=70-
About+us~&2=60-News+archive~&3=~ (accessed on
21 May 2009).
9. Birth, Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996
(Vic) s49.
10. Note 7 above, at .15.
11. Note 3 above, at 35.
12. Carolyn Evans & Simon Evans, Australian Bills of Rights:
The law of the Victorian Charter and the ACT Human Rights
Act (2008), fexisNexis Butterworths, NSW, p. 3.
13. Human Rights Consultation Committee. Rights,
Responsibilities and Respect: The report of the Human
Rights Consultation Committee, Victorian Department
of Justice, November 2005, p. 45,
14. Arguments could also be raised about discrimination
against Indigenous Australians in the enjoyment of this
right, but that is beyond the scope of this article.
15. It has been observed, with respect to the corre-
sponding provision in the ICCPR, that "such measures,
although intended primarily to ensure that children
fully enjoy the other rights enunciated in the Covenant,
may also be [for the enjoyment of] economic, social
and cultural" rights. General Comment No, 17: Rights
of the Child (Art. 24), Human Rights Committee, 7 April
1989, para 3.
16. Manfred Nowak, UN Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights: CCPR commentary (2nd edn, 2005), NP Engel
Publishers, Arlington, USA, p, 547
Write for the UJ
The LIJ welcomes contributions - both serious and
light-hearted - on topics of interest to the Victorian legal
profession from legal practitioners and allied professionals.
As well as helping inform the profession, authors will earn
1 CPD unit for every 1000 words published in the LIJ.
Contributions and inquiries should,
in the first instance, be directed to
LIJ editorial assistant Tracy Whitmey
via email to twhitmey@liv.asn.au.
LIJ staff greatly appreciate the time
and effort involved in drafting articles
for publication and are readily available
to assist prospective authors with their
queries, ph (03) 9607 9339.
For more information go to www.liv.asn.au/journal/about/journal-Wnte.html
GIVING YOUR FIRM
THE ADVANTAGE
The College of Law Victoria, a
joint venture with the LIV, offers
nationally recognised practical
legal training to meet admission
requirements in Victoria.
Practical Legal Training - Graduate
Diploma of Legal Practice
I multiple course start dates
throughout the year
» part-time options to suit work needs
t flexible online learning platform
i cost effective training that can be
completed in just 30 weeks
i meets all required competencies
,- FREE online legal job board to
advertise work experience or
graduate positions
Supervised Workplace Training
courses also available
Find out how your firm can benefit:
Ph 1300 856 111 or visit
w>v.-. collav. odu uu
/
College of Law
.stilute__
IE
tIJ OCTOBER 2009 55