Harare: Delegates from ten African countries, regional institutions, and UN agencies are meeting in Harare to explore ways to integrate migrants, displaced persons, and border communities into national ID systems. The five-day workshop, organized by the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) in collaboration with the African Union Commission (AUC), the International Organization for Migration (IOM), and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), introduces a new Good Legal Identity Toolkit to help countries strengthen inclusion and accountability.
According to Ethiopian News Agency, hundreds of millions of people in Africa lack legal documentation, leaving migrants particularly vulnerable. Without proof of identity, they face exclusion from education, healthcare, employment, and justice systems, rendering them invisible to the state and at risk of exploitation. Christian Oldiges, Chief of the ECA's Social Policy Section, opened the workshop by emphasizing that legal identification is not just a technical issue but a foundation for inclusive development and data systems.
Oldiges stated that legal ID is a Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target linked to nearly all others, forming the basis for statistics. Many African countries now recognize the lack of legal ID not only as a governance gap but as a form of poverty. He highlighted national efforts to integrate legal identity into poverty assessments. For example, Botswana includes 'social inclusion' as a key poverty dimension, considering households deprived if no member has a birth certificate or national ID. Angola and Malawi have adopted similar indicators.
The East and Horn of Africa underscore the pressing need for action. Between 2010 and 2019, the number of international migrants in the region more than doubled. Today, it hosts nearly five million refugees and over 85,000 stateless persons, primarily in Uganda, Kenya, and South Sudan. 'Legal identity is a fundamental human right and a gateway to essential services,' Oldiges stressed.
Gideon Rutaremwa, speaking on behalf of William Muhwava, Chief of ECA's Demographic and Social Statistics Section, reinforced this view by stating that legal identity allows individuals to prove their existence, identity, and family ties. To unlock Africa's potential, a life-cycle approach from birth to death must be adopted. He warned that the lack of documentation perpetuates poverty, inequality, and exclusion, especially for displaced populations often left outside formal systems.
The AUC, a co-organizer, stressed the need for cross-border collaboration. Peter Mudungwe, AUC Migration Governance Expert, urged alignment between national civil registration efforts and continental frameworks safeguarding migrants' and stateless persons' rights. Diana Cartier, IOM Chief of Mission in Zimbabwe, added that legal identity is foundational. Without it, migrants face systemic exclusion, which can mean a lifetime of invisibility for women, children, and stateless persons.
The workshop explores ways to integrate migrants, displaced persons, and border communities into national ID systems while protecting their rights and data. Participants are reviewing the Good Legal Identity Toolkit and sharing policy experiences from Kenya, Zimbabwe, Somalia, Rwanda, Uganda, South Sudan, and others. Discussions aim to yield concrete recommendations and national commitments for more inclusive ID systems. The toolkit guides interoperability, privacy, legal frameworks, and documenting hard-to-reach populations.
With less than five years to achieve SDG target 16.9 (legal identity for all), organizers stress that solutions must go beyond technical upgrades to address the legal and policy barriers excluding migrants.