Pakistan’s invisible millions


Muhammad teaching his children and nephews in their home at Shaikh Mal Khel village in Landi Kotal town in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

AHMED Raza is invisible in the eyes of his government, unable to study or work, because like millions of other Pakistanis, he lacks identification papers.

In the South Asian nation of more than 240 million people, parents generally wait until a child begins school at the age of five to obtain a birth certificate, which is required for enrolment in most parts of Pakistan.

Ahmed slipped through the cracks until the end of elementary school, but when his middle school requested documentation, his mother had no choice but to withdraw him.

aryam and Ahmed working in the kitchen in their house in Karachi, both not registered with National Database and Registration Authority. Ahmed is invisible in the eyes of his government, unable to study or work, because like millions of other Pakistanis, he lacks identification papers. — AFParyam and Ahmed working in the kitchen in their house in Karachi, both not registered with National Database and Registration Authority. Ahmed is invisible in the eyes of his government, unable to study or work, because like millions of other Pakistanis, he lacks identification papers. — AFP

“If I go looking for work, they ask for my ID card. Without it, they refuse to hire me,” said the 19-year-old in the megacity of Karachi, the southern economic capital.

He has already been arrested twice for failing to present identification cards when stopped by police at checkpoints.

Ahmed’s mother Maryam Suleman, who is also unregistered, said she “didn’t understand the importance of having identity documents”.

“I had no idea I would face such difficulties later in life for not being registered,” the 55-year-old widow said from the single room she and Ahmed share.

Pakistan launched biometric identification cards in 2000 and registration is increasingly required in all aspects of ­formal life, especially in cities.

In 2021, the National Database and Registration Authority estimated that around 45 million people were not registered. They have declined to release updated figures or reply to repeated requests for comment.

To register, Ahmed needs his mother’s or uncle’s documents – an expensive and complex process at their age, often requi­ring a doctor, lawyer or newspaper notice.

The paperwork, he says, costs up to US$165 – a month and a half’s income for the two of them, who earn a living doing housework and odd jobs in a grocery shop.

Locals whisper that registration often requires bribes, and some suggest the black market offers a last resort.

“Our lives could have been different if we had our identity cards,” Ahmed said.

In remote Punjab villages like Rajanpur, Unicef is trying to prevent people from falling into the same fate as Ahmed.

They conduct door-to-door registration campaigns, warning parents that undocumented children face higher risks of child labour and forced marriage.

Currently, 58% of children under five have no birth certificate, according to ­government figures.

Registration fees depend on the pro­vince; some free, others from US$0.70 to US$7 – still a burden for many Pakistanis, about 45% of whom live in poverty.

“Our men have no time or money to go to the council and miss a day’s work,” said Nazia Hussain, mother of two unregiste­red children.

The “slow process” often requires multiple trips and there is “no means of transport for a single woman,” she said.

Saba, from the same village, is determined to register her three children, star­ting with convincing her in-laws of its value.

“We don’t want our children’s future to be like our past. If children go to school, the future will be brighter,” said Saba, who goes by just one name.

Campaigns in the village have resulted in an increase of birth registration rates from 6.1% in 2018 to 17.7% in 2024, accor­ding to Unicef.

This will improve the futures of an entire generation, believes Zahida Man­zoor, child protection officer at Unicef, ­dispatched to the village.

“If the state doesn’t know that a child exists, it can’t provide basic services,” she said.

“If a child does not have an identity, it means the state has not recognised their existence. The state is not planning for the services that the child will need after birth.”

Muhammad Haris and his brothers, who have few interactions with the formal state in their border village in the mountainous province of Khyber Pakh­tun­khwa, have not registered any of their eight children.

“The government asks for documents for the pilgrimage visa to Mecca,” a journey typically made after saving for a lifetime, he said.

For him, this is the only reason worthy of registration. — AFP

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