News Articles

Unabridged birth certificates: a hassle‚ ineffective and a deterrent to tourism

Source: Timeslive, 30/03/2018


The need for families to obtain unabridged birth certificates before
travelling is a deterrent to tourism‚ which should be a growth
industry‚ according to survey.
Research by Travelstart from February 12 to March 12‚ 2018 tapped
into the views of 559 travellers‚ specifically‚ those who have
travelled outside South Africa in the past two years with minors
under the age of 18.
• 67% of respondents said they needed to apply for an
unabridged birth certificate to travel.
• 41% of the sixty seven percent said their application took
more than 6 weeks to process through Home Affairs‚ adding hassle‚
stress and cost implications to travel outside South Africa.
• 27% said they encountered administrative problems related to
the unabridged birth certificate.
Most respondents also said they encountered problems when departing
South Africa. Survey participants cited immigration (55%) and check-
in (42%) as the points in their journey where they experienced
problems.
Everywhere in the trade‚ consultants have unabridged-related horror
stories to share and 50% agree customers are confused by the
regulation.
Most airline representatives were reluctant to comment about
unabridged birth certificates saying: “it is a sensitive matter and
they are only applying the rule set by government”. However‚
Travelstart said‚ two well-known airlines that fly to South Africa
daily from hubs overseas confirmed their passengers experienced
problems regularly and pointed to a lack of training for immigration
officials and confusion at certain stations being the primary cause
of unabridged issues.
From the airlines` perspective‚ most problems occur at immigration
and check-in - aligning with passengers’ experience.
Twenty nine percent of travellers said they have been denied boarding
in the past two years because of unabridged birth certificate
regulation.
Travelstart also engaged members of the SA travel trade including
independent travel consultants and those working for retail travel
agencies. Travelstart found that foreign families travelling to South
Africa are most negatively affected by unabridged birth certificates.
`Everywhere in the trade‚ consultants have unabridged-related horror
stories to share and 50% agree customers are confused by the
regulation.`
Almost two thirds (67%) of surveyed agents said their clients have
been affected by unabridged birth certificate regulation with foreign
families travelling to South Africa (67%) and single mothers (33%)
being the most negatively affected.
According to Aviation Barometer‚ published every quarter by Airports
Company South Africa‚ growth in passenger numbers at nine airports
held steady at just over 3% in the fourth quarter of 2017.
Despite this growth‚ Travelstart said: `Unabridged birth certificates
continue to prevent families from travelling. In many cases‚
travellers and airline staff at overseas origin airports are left to
fend for themselves with the onus being on the traveller to carry the
correct documentation...`
Tourism currently sustains 700‚000 direct jobs‚ but its growth is
being stymied. The unabridged birth certificate policy should be
reviewed‚ said Travelstart.
`. . .The regulation is negatively impacting the tourism experience
and more than likely deterring willing participants from a sector
thirsty for growth. . .
`As the potential for growth in the sector is more than apparent and
needed to boost jobs and the economy‚ those working in South Africa’s
travel trade remain hopeful that revising the need for superfluous
unabridged birth certificate regulation forms part of South Africa’s
new dawn (as espoused by President Cyril Ramaphosa).`
Travelstart added the policy was not even effective in addressing the
reason it was implemented - to combat child trafficking - as real
human traffickers don’t follow legitimate and documented methods of
travel but cross the border in illegitimate and clandestine
circumstances.


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