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Authors Nicole Bouah Carmel Jacobs
Affiliation University Western Cape, South Africa
Email 3643523@myuwc.ac.za; cajacobs@uwc.ac.za
Date Submitted 8 November 2022
Date Revised 22 February 2024
Date Accepted 22 February 2024
Date Published 5 June 2024
Editor Prof W Erlank
Journal Editor Prof C Rautenbach
How to cite this contribution
Bouah N and Jacobs C "A Child's Right to Identity in the Context of Embryo Donation: Part 1" PER / PELJ 2024(27) - DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2024/v27i0a15131
Copyright
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2024/v27i0a15131
Abstract
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This article investigates the extent to which the South African |
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Keywords
Assisted reproductive technologies; disclosure; donor-conceived child; embryo donation; gamete donor.
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1 Introduction and background
Since the latter part of the 20th century, the development of assisted reproductive technologies (ART)
1
* Nicole Bouah. LLB LLM (UWC). Associate, Apex Fund and Corporate Products SA. Email:
3643523@myuwc.ac.za
. ORCiD: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0447-3916. ** Carmel Jacobs. LLB (UWC) LLM (UP) PhD (Uni Leiden). Senior Lecturer, Department of Private Law, University of the Western Cape, South Africa. Email: cajacobs@uwc.ac.za. ORCiD: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5148-4269. 1 ART is defined as "all treatments or procedures that include the in vitro handling of both human oocytes and sperm or of embryos for the purpose of initiating a pregnancy". See Zegers-Hochschild et al 2009 Fertility and Sterility 1521. 2 Golombok and Tasker "Socioemotional Development in Changing Families" 1. 3 Robertson 2004 Case W Res L Rev 324. 4 Richardson 2015 York Online Undergraduate Research Review 83.
Embryo donation refers to "the transfer of an embryo resulting from gametes that did not originate from the recipient and her partner".
5
5 Zegers-Hochschild et al 2009 Fertility and Sterility 1522. 6 Walters Embryo Adoption 3. 7 Wanggren, Prag and Skoog Svanberg 2013 Upsala Journal of Medical Sciences 187. 8 MacCallum and Golombok 2007 Human Reproduction 2889. 9 MacCallum and Golombok 2007 Human Reproduction 2891. 10 Walters Embryo Adoption 3. 11 MacCallum and Golombok 2007 Human Reproduction 2888. 12 Alizadeh and Samani 2014 Iranian Journal of Reproductive Medicine 169. 13 Widdows and MacCallum 2002 J Med Ethics 140.
number of countries treat embryo donation as gamete donation due to the gestational link, which means that from the point of birth the recipient couple are the sole legal parents.
14
14 MacCallum 2009
https://www.bionews.org.uk/page_92056
. 15 Ravitsky 2017 Israel Journal of Health Policy Research 3. 16 Widdows and MacCallum 2002 J Med Ethics 140.
To date, the sole consideration surrounding embryo donation has been about what the donating couple and receiving couple desire, not what the resulting child's rights or needs are.
17
17 Faust 2019
https://thefederalist.com/2019/12/04/why-embryo-adoption-damages-childrens-rights
. 18 Walters Embryo Adoption 8.
This research will unpack and analyse the various components of what the concept of the right to identity encompasses. It will argue that both national and international law do not consider the unintended consequences that life through embryo donation brings. Furthermore, it will argue that it is in the best interests of the child that they are provided with the genetic and identifying information revealing their genetic origins at some point in their life. Moreover, how this right is impacted by the process of embryo donation needs to be examined. But first it is necessary to distinguish embryo donation from surrogacy and gamete donation.
2 Surrogacy and gamete donation versus embryo donation
A distinction can be drawn between surrogacy and embryo donation. Under South African law, surrogacy is regulated by Chapter 19 of the Children's Act and requires a lawyer to draw up a contract which must be confirmed by the High Court before the surrogacy procedure can commence.
19
19 Van Niekerk 2018
https://www.golegal.co.za/surrogacy-south-africa-children
. 20 AB v Minister of Social Development 2017 3 SA 570 (CC) (hereafter the AB case). para 294.
the child is not genetically linked to either recipient, but has a gestational link with the recipient mother who is able to take prenatal care without relying on a birth mother. The laws of parentage are clearly set out for all parties to the surrogate motherhood agreement,
21
21 Section 287 of the Children's Act 38 of 2005 (hereafter the Children's Act). 22 Nosarka and Kruger 2005 SAMJ 944. 23 The complexities of creating a child through embryo donation include whether the child would have genetic siblings elsewhere; the long-term impact on both families; feelings of grief and loss; and the challenge of receiving medical information about the donor couple and/or another donor sibling. See Ethics Committee 2021 Fertility and Sterility 1402-1403.
At the same time, embryo donation is also different from gamete donation, where the resulting child has a genetic link to one of the recipients. In the case of egg donation the child born is genetically related to the father but not to the mother
24
24 Imrie et al 2019 Child Development 1333. 25 Golombok et al 2011 Journal of Family Psychology 230.
3 Definition and scope of the concept of identity
The right to know one's identity is not a novel concept.
26
26 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 5. 27 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 5.
The right to identity was first recognised under Article 7 and Article 8 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC).
28
28 Besson 2007 IJLPF 143.
States Parties undertake to respect the right of the child to preserve his or her identity, including nationality, name and family relations as recognized by law without unlawful interference.
29
29 Article 8(1) of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989) (hereafter the CRC).
Article 8 originated in response to the abduction of children under Argentina's military regime.
30
30 Clark 2012 Ga J Int'l & Comp L 626. 31 The original proposal was: "The child has the inalienable right to retain his true and genuine personal, legal and family identity. In the event that a child has been fraudulently deprived of some or all of the elements of his identity, the State must give him special protection and assistance with a view to re-establishing his true and genuine identity as soon as possible. In particular, this obligation of the State includes restoring the child to his blood relations to be brought up." Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 223. 32 Some of these countries include the United Kingdom, the Czech Republic, Luxembourg and Poland. See O'Donovan 2002 Law and Society Review 352. 33 "Some countries expressed concerns that the right might conflict with developing medical technology regarding artificial insemination and IVF." See Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 223. 34 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 1.40. 35 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 8. 36 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 8.
The child's right to protection of their legal and national identities is provided for under Article 7 of the CRC
37
37 Article 7(1) of the CRC: "(1) The child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have the right from birth to a name, the right to acquire a nationality and. as far as possible, the right to know and be cared for by his or her parents. (2) States Parties shall ensure the implementation of these rights in accordance with their national law and their obligations under the relevant international instruments in this field, in particular where the child would otherwise be stateless." 38 Article 24(2) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966) (hereafter the ICCPR): "Every child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have a name"; Art 3 of the ICCPR: "Every child has the right to acquire a nationality". 39 The Human Rights Committee in its General Comment No 17 on Article 24 of the ICCPR opined that: "this provision … is designed to promote recognition of the child's legal personality." One of the main reasons behind the importance of birth registration is to decrease the danger of treatment that is irreconcilable with the enjoyment of other rights provided for in the Covenant. See UN Human Rights Committee CCPR General Comment No 17 on Article 24 (Rights of the Child) (1989) para 7.
The child's right to biological and familial identities
40
40 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 226. 41 Article 7(1) of the CRC. 42 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 224. For the purposes of this article the term "donating couple" refers to the biological parents and the term "recipient couple" refers to the social parents. 43 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 7.
In short, the provisions of the CRC relating specifically to the child's right to identity raise a number of issues with regard to other human rights, compatibility with ART practices,
44
44 Zegers-Hochschild et al 2009 Fertility and Sterility 1520-1521. 45 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 223. 46 Ronen 2004 IJLPF 160.
Identity is characterised as a "subjective sense of an invigorating sameness and continuity".
47
47 Schachter 2002 Human Development 417. 48 Schachter 2002 Human Development 417. 49 Haydon Identity Development 48. 50 Haydon Identity Development 11. 51 Ludlow 2020 Journal of Law and the Biosciences 1. 52 Clark "Ethical Implications of Embryo Adoption" 220. 53 Sandberg 2016 Nordic Journal of Human Rights 343. 54 Tasker et al 2018 Genealogy 16. 55 Kidd Culture and Identity 2. 56 Iruka et al 2021 https://equity-coalition.fpg.unc.edu/wp-content/uploads/IIruka-et-al_Ethnic-Racial-Identity-Collaborative-Research-Summary-2021.pdf 1. 57 Page Artificial Womb Technology 5.
secrecy.
58
58 Widdows and MacCallum 2002 J Med Ethics 140. 59 Rispel Scope and Content of the Child's Right to Identity 31.
4 Identity in the context of embryo donation
4.1 The child's right to personal identity
Personal identity, also referred to as self or individual identity, pertains to a child's subjective feelings about their distinctiveness from others.
60
60 A child's earliest years form the foundation of their personal identity. Raburu 2015 Journal of Educational and Social Research 95. It refers to "self-categories which define the individual as a unique person in terms of their individual differences from other persons". See Turner et al "Personal and Social Identity" 3. 61 Ravitsky 2010 Minnesota Journal of Law, Science and Technology 675. 62 It is the way in which children view themselves or wonder what their role in this world is. Ravitsky 2010 Minnesota Journal of Law, Science and Technology 675. 63 Raburu 2015 Journal of Educational and Social Research 95.
A child's right to personal identity is based on two elements: first, that "genealogical knowledge is central to the development of personal identity"
64
64 Turkmendag 2012 Journal of Law and Society 70. 65 Turkmendag 2012 Journal of Law and Society 70. 66 Harrigan et al 2015 Journal of Family Communication 84. 67 Turner and Coyle 2000 Human Reproduction 2044. 68 Turner and Coyle 2000 Human Reproduction 2044.
Studies conducted on adopted children indicate that they show a strong interest in seeking to discover their personal identities.
69
69 Adoptive children may ask themselves questions similar to those asked by children born through embryo donation, such as "Where did I come from? Did I grow in [your] tummy? How could [my biological parents] give me away?" By adolescence, questions of personal identity intensify: "Why was I relinquished? Why did it happen to me?" See Billadeau 2014 https://adoption.com/personal-identity-issues-in-adoption.
have been shown in children who are raised by single parents.
70
70 Golombok et al 2016 Journal of Family Psychology 415. 71 Mikulic v Croatia (ECtHR) Appl No 53176/99 of 7 February 2002. 72 Harrigan et al 2015 Journal of Family Communication 84. 73 Armuand et al 2019 BMC Pediatrics 3. 74 Adoptees may have often been exposed to negative experiences, such as institutionalisation and maltreatment. Additionally, children born through embryo donation are carried and birthed by their recipient mothers. See Armuand et al 2019 BMC Pediatrics 7. 75 Samani 2009 Reproductive BioMedicine Online 30.
Nevertheless, it cannot be assumed that the thoughts and feelings of children born through embryo donation are one-sided. Where such children feel as though their identities are incomplete, it can hardly be in their best interests to withhold information about their origins which would provide them with a more positive sense of identity by helping them to understand their history and where they come from.
76
76 Ravitsky 2010 Minnesota Journal of Law, Science and Technology 675. Also see Frith, Blyth and Lui 2017 Human Reproduction 1095. 77 Sokol 2009 Graduate Journal of Counselling Psychology 1. 78 Dinsmore date unknown https://pved.org/buildingfamily.php. 79 Sokol 2009 Graduate Journal of Counselling Psychology 7. 80 Sokol 2009 Graduate Journal of Counselling Psychology 7.
When information about children's origins is withheld, they may be able to pick up "hidden clues"
81
81 Turner and Coyle 2000 Human Reproduction 2049. 82 Turner and Coyle 2000 Human Reproduction 2049. 83 Withholding information about the child's manner of connection affects not only her/his individual identity but also her/his family and parental dynamics. One child
said "I felt a considerable amount of regret about how utterly senseless it had been for my parents to keep this information from me for so long." See Turner and Coyle 2000 Human Reproduction 2048.
identifying information on the donor couple deprives the child born via embryo donation of a major aspect of her/his individual autonomy: the opportunity to decide what meaning to assign to her/his personal identity.
84
84 Amorós 2015 Catalan Social Sciences Review 8-9.
4.2 The child's right to biological identity
The child's biological identity refers to the identity of the genetic parents who contributed their gametes – the egg and sperm – to form the embryo from which the child was born.
85
85 This should not be confused with the birth mother. O'Brien 2004
https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/major-problems-involved-in-embryo-donation-1.1138217
. 86 Moffat "Biological Identity" 61. 87 Frith 2001 Human Reproduction 821.
Conceiving through the use of donated embryos may be as close to an approximation of genetic parenthood as possible as the recipient mother carries and gives birth to the child and the father is present throughout the pregnancy.
88
88 Widdows and MacCallum 2002 J Med Ethics 141. 89 Turkmendag 2012 Journal of Law and Society 59. 90 Turkmendag 2012 Journal of Law and Society 59. 91 Cherry 2022
https://www.verywellmind.com/what-is-nature-versus-nurture-2795392
. "[K]nowledge about genetic links is that it is not mere information but it is powerful knowledge that changes relationships regardless of the wishes of those involved." See Turkmendag 2012 Journal of Law and Society 73.
The significance of this aspect of identity was confirmed in Rose v Secretary of State for Health,
92
92 Rose v Secretary of State for Health and Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority [2002] 2 Family Law Reports 962 (hereafter the Rose case). 93 The case concerned the rights of children born through artificial insemination by a donor. See Rose case para 1.
I feel that these genetic connections are very important to me, socially, emotionally, medically, and even spiritually. I believe it to be no exaggeration that non-identifying information will assist me in forming a fuller sense of self or identity and answer questions that I have been asking for a long time. I am angry that it has been assumed that this would not be the case…it is believed that if we are created artificially we will not have the natural need to know to whom we are related.
94
94 She also expressed the thought of unknowingly passing her genetic siblings in the street. See Rose case para 7.
The European Court of Human Rights found in her favour and interpreted Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), which provides for a right to respect for private and family life, to incorporate the concept of personal identity, including the right to obtain information about a biological parent.
95
95 See Rose case para 48. 96 See Rose case para 37. 97 See Rose case para 31.
4.3 The child's right to family identity
Family is the foundation for identity construction. It shapes who one is, provides a sense of belonging and defines who one is through one's relationships with one's family members.
98
98 Family identity is largely characterised by ''the macro processes that define and distinguish one family from another. Thus, family identity is foundational to the ways in which individuals develop their frameworks for family and choose to continue - or not to continue - those relationships throughout their lives.'' See Phillips Communication and Family Identity 3. 99 Scabini and Manzi "Family Processes and Identity" 569. 100 Scabini and Manzi "Family Processes and Identity" 575. 101 Scabini and Manzi "Family Processes and Identity" 575. 102 Kreppner 2000 Psicologia 11.
their parental and intergenerational "filial" relationships, in addition to knowledge of their family heritage.
103
103 The term filial "involves both the relationship between offspring and each individual parent and the relationship between maternal and paternal lineages". Scabini and Manzi "Family Processes and Identity" 575-576.
The family is the most fundamental unit of society and has widespread support in international law.
104
104 For example, the CRC, African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (1990) (the ACRWC) and the European Convention for the Protection of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms (1950) (the ECHR). 105 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 226. 106 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 226. 107 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 226. 108 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 226. 109 Von Korrff and Grotevant 2011 Journal of Family Psychology 393.
A child's family identity should thus be thought of in a dynamic way.
110
110 Teman and Berend 2020 Journal of Family Issues 2-3. 111 Each family holds a variety of identities: a collective family identity, a parent-child or sibling identity, relational identities, and individual family members' identities. See Epp and Price 2008 Journal of Consumer Research 50. 112 Golombok et al 1995 Child Development 296. 113 Golombok et al 1995 Child Development 286. 114 Swink 2011 https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/217156567.pdf 17. 115 Child Rights International Network date unknown https://archive.crin.org/ en/home/rights/convention/articles/article-8-preservation-identity.html.
framework and South African legislature adequately provide protection for the right to identity of a child born through embryo donation.
4.4 The best interests of the child principle
The best interests of the child principle is an intrinsic standard associated with child-related matters.
116
116 Supaat 2014 International Journal of Business, Economics and Law 109. 117 Takàcs 2021 Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 97.
[t]he child shall enjoy special protection, and shall be given opportunities and facilities, by law and by other means, to enable him to develop physically, mentally, morally, spiritually and socially in a healthy and normal manner and in conditions of freedom and dignity. In the enactment of laws for this purpose, the best interests of the child shall be the paramount consideration.
118
118 Principle 2 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) (the UDHR).
The principle was later codified in Article 3 of the CRC, which is to be applied in all decisions made by all organs of states, i.e. the judiciary, executive and legislature. It is important to note that the concept of paramountcy was reduced to that of primary consideration:
1. In all actions concerning children, whether undertaken by public or private social welfare institutions, courts of law, administrative authorities or legislative bodies, the best interests of the child shall be a primary consideration.
119
119 Article 3(1) of the CRC.
In comparison, the ACRWC has a somewhat higher standard of "the primary consideration".
120
120 Skelton 2019 De Jure 558. 121 Article 4(1) of the ACRWC.
In South African law the principle was developed through family law and welfare proceedings in the early 1900s before its inclusion as a right in the Bill of Rights (BOR).
122
122 Section 28(2) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (the Constitution). 123 Skelton 2019 De Jure 558.
Whilst the principle calls for special attention when handling matters which affect children, there is no universally accepted definition of the term "the best interests of the child".
124
124 Supaat 2014 International Journal of Business, Economics and Law 109.
frequently entails deliberation on issues of ambiguity and the application thereof.
125
125 Supaat 2014 International Journal of Business, Economics and Law 109.
5 Safeguarding the child's right to identity
5.1 Safeguarding the child's right to identity at the international level
The protection and promotion of children's rights in the field of ART, specifically of children born through embryo donation, has not been the prime focus of the international human rights agenda.
126
126 The infringed rights of the recipients and their ability to access ART services has been the primary focus. See Rispel Scope and Content of the Child's Right to Identity 23; Paulk 2014 Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 782. "[E]xcept for the possible impacts of [ARTs] on children's physical health, there has been an almost total failure to take into account other impacts of them on children." See Somerville 2007 Journal of Family Studies 183. 127 Brezina and Zhao 2011 Obstetrics and Gynecology International 1.
International law sets out the rights that States who have signed and ratified human rights instruments are obliged to provide and protect.
128
128 Paulk 2014 Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 785. 129 United Nations Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner date unknown
https://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/InternationalLaw.aspx
.
As previously mentioned, South Africa is a State Party to both the CRC and the ACRWC.
130
130 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) paras 1.12-1.13. 131 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) paras 1.12-1.13.
5.1.1 The Convention on the Rights of the Child
Articles 7, 8 and 9 of the CRC respectively guarantee "the child's rights to a name, to citizenship, to know their parents and not to be separated from them".
132
132 Ronen 2004 IJLPF 159.
Article 7 sets out a child's right to nationality, name and family relations:
133
133 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 6.
The child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have the right from birth to a name, the right to acquire a nationality and, as far as possible, the right to know and be cared for by his or her parents.
134
134 Article 7(1) of the CRC.
While name and nationality are components of the child's identity, these elements involve only a restricted notion of identity.
135
135 Children's nationality generally follows from the issuing of their birth certificates. The CRC Committee and Centre for Civil and Political Rights (CCPR) have regularly urged State Parties to take the necessary measures to ensure all children are registered at birth in accordance with Art 24(3) of the ICCPR. See Doek 2006 Refugee Survey Quarterly 26-27. Egypt, for example, linked the "right from birth to know and belong to his parents [with] the right to a name and a nationality for children because it ensures psychological stability and the development of [the child's] personality". This reflects most societies' understanding of the concept of identity. See Page Artificial Womb Technology 11. 136 Article 7(1) of the CRC.
First, embryo donation raises several questions with regard to the right to be "cared for" by one's parents, since the person who raises the child is the same one who gave birth to her/him, and although they may not share a genetic link they share a gestational link.
137
137 Wade 2017 Child Law Quarterly 11. 138 Wade 2017 Child Law Quarterly 11. 139 MacCallum 2009 Human Reproduction 517. 140 UN Committee on the Rights of the Child General Comment No 14 (2013) on the Right of the Child to Have His or Her Best Interests Taken as a Primary Consideration (Art 3, Para 1) (2013) para 59. 141 Wade 2017 Child Law Quarterly 12.
Secondly, in respect of the right to "know one's parents" under Article 7(1) of the CRC, embryo donation once more raises questions such as whether children should know about the method of their conception and the identities of their biological parents.
142
142 Wade 2017 Child Law Quarterly 12. 143 Clark 2012 Ga J Int'l & Comp L 626. In France a person's right to know her/his origins versus the right of a woman right to give birth anonymously has become a contentious issue. In 2003 the ECHR dismissed an action brought by Pascale Odievre in which she challenged the rules governing the confidentiality of her birth parents' identities. The Movement Against Accouchement sous X (Anonymous Parents): To Show One's Suffering, to Claim One's Right argued that "not knowing the identity of one's birth parents – not knowing where one comes from, whom one looks like, whom one is like causes great moral suffering, prevents the correct
shaping of one's identity and can even cause some psychological problems for the next generation". These feelings are intensified when the State is in possession of information concerning one's origins and refuses to disclose it. For these reasons, knowing the identity of one's birth parents is arguably a human right and a child's right. See Lefaucheur 2004 IJLPF 319, 326, 327.
to prevent and eradicate the practice and ensure rather that the information regarding the child's parents be registered and filed as a necessary measure.
144
144 Buia Survey on the CRC Committee's Concluding Observations 17. 145 Wade 2017 Child Law Quarterly 12. 146 Clark 2012 Ga J Int'l & Comp L 626; Art 7(1) of the CRC.
Article 8 of the CRC stipulates the following:
1. States Parties undertake to respect the right of the child to preserve his or her identity, including nationality, name and family relations as recognized by law without unlawful interference.
2. Where a child is illegally deprived of some or all of the elements of his or her identity, States Parties shall provide appropriate assistance and protection, with a view to re-establishing speedily his or her identity.
It may be debated that the "right to identity" under Article 8 of the CRC is an independent right which aims to safeguard the right to know one's genetic origins.
147
147 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 13-14. 148 De Melo-Martin 2014 Hastings Centre Report 28. 149 Rispel Scope and Content of the Child's Right to Identity 17. 150 "Nationality, name and family relations, are mentioned illustratively (implied by the word 'including')." See Ronen 2004 IJLPF 159. 151 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 1.41.
The phrase "family relations as recognised by law" is unclear,
152
152 Hodgkin, Newell and UNICEF Implementation Handbook 114. 153 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 1.42. 154 Hodgkin, Newell and UNICEF Implementation Handbook 114.
There is undoubtedly growing support for the recognition of children's interest in being informed of the truth of their biological origins because it
gives rise to claims of justice as opposed to the interests of adults, which form the foundation for attempts at exercising power:
155
155 Eekelaar Family Law and Personal Life 75-76.
Children have interest in having knowledge of the physical truth because it provides an underlying certainty about the world they have come into, incapable of manipulation by the adults. The children may stake their claims against those who is responsible for their being.
156
156 Eekelaar Family Law and Personal Life 75-76.
Thus, efforts must be made to obtain children's viewpoint and caution should be exercised against adopting a paternalistic mindset that views children as individuals with lesser capacity.
157
157 Turkmendag 2008 IJLPF 301.
The term "preserve" suggests both the non-interference in identity and the preservation of records pertaining to genealogy and birth registration.
158
158 Hodgkin, Newell and UNICEF Implementation Handbook 115. 159 Genetic profiling is a technique whereby a sample of DNA is cut into fragments and separated by size in order to make a characteristic profile of DNA bands for individuals. This technique can be used to determine one's biological parents. See Sharma 2007 Indian Journal of Human Genetics 88. See also BBC date unknown
https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/z8nxtyc/revision/6
. Access to one's DNA ancestry has been made easy due to the widespread expansion of genetic databases. See Sadeghi 2019 Journal of Reproduction and Infertility 119. 160 Hodgkin, Newell and UNICEF Implementation Handbook 117. 161 Hodgkin, Newell and UNICEF Implementation Handbook 115.
Hence, Article 8 implies that State Parties have the positive duty to register and preserve data concerning a child's identity, for that data to be made accessible to the child and for appropriate measures to be implemented in order to re-establish the child's identity.
162
162 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) 8. 163 Hodgkin, Newell and UNICEF Implementation Handbook 114. 164 Hodgkin, Newell and UNICEF Implementation Handbook 115.
Neither Article 7 nor Article 8 resolves the issue of whether children born through embryo donation are guaranteed the right to know their origins, nor do they offer any criteria as to how to balance this right against the rights of
privacy of both the social and biological parents.
165
165 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 1.45. 166 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 1.46.
5.1.2 The African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child
This regional instrument was drafted with the intent to address the CRC's omission of important socio-cultural realities and values which are particular to the African continent.
167
167 Skujyte Rights of African Children 29-30. 168 Skujyte Rights of African Children 29-30. 169 See Gose African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child 96.
The African Committee of Experts (the African Children's Charter Committee) views the rights to a name, birth registration and a nationality together as the pillars of a child's identity.
170
170 African Committee of Experts General Comment on Article 6 of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (2014) para 23.
1. Every child shall have the right from his birth to a name.
2. Every child shall be registered immediately after birth.
3. Every child has the right to acquire a nationality.
State Parties to the present Charter shall undertake to ensure that their Constitutional legislation recognize the principles according to which a child shall acquire the nationality of the State in the territory of which he has laws.
171
171 Article 6 of the ACRWC.
The wording of Article 6 of the ACRWC is similar to that of Article 7 of the CRC,
172
172 Article 7(1) of the CRC: "The child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have the right from birth to a name, the right to acquire a nationality and. as far as possible, the right to know and be cared for by his or her parents." 173 "This setup highlights the fact that Article 6 of the Charter enshrines three different rights of the child." See Gose African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child 94. 174 This exclusion may be justified by the fact that in the African context children are not always cared for by their parents. See Gose African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child 94.
Nevertheless, these rights may be derived from a broad interpretation of Article 19 of the ACRWC, which provides for the child to maintain personal relations and direct contact with her/his parents.
175
175 Article 19 of the ACRWC states that: "(1) Every child shall be entitled to the enjoyment of parental care and protection and shall, whenever possible, have the right to reside with his or her parents. No child shall be separated from his/her parents against his/her will, except when a judicial authority determines in accordance with the appropriate law, that such separation is in the best interest of the child. (2) Every child who is separated from one or both parents shall have the right to maintain personal relations and direct contact with both parents on a regular basis."
Article 6(4) of the ACRWC complements Article 7(2) of the CRC.
176
176 Article 7(2) of the CRC: "States Parties shall ensure the implementation of these rights in accordance with their national law and their obligations under the relevant international instruments in this field, in particular where the child would otherwise be stateless." 177 Gose African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child 95. 178 Gose African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child 95.
Nationality is generally acquired automatically at birth under the law on the basis of either descent or birth in the territory, or a combination of both and parentage.
179
179 De Groot and Vonk 2018 NILR 320. 180 Birth registration also plays a crucial role in preserving the child's identity against illegal changes, such as the falsification of family ties. See African Committee of Experts General Comment on Article 6 of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (2014) para 23. An example of this would be where children traffickers falsify family ties to traffic children, for example, for illicit intercountry adoption. Implementation of the right to birth registration through the establishment of a strong, integrated and universal birth registration system is one measure to combat this illicit practice. See African Committee of Experts General Comment on Article 6 of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (2014) para 34. 181 De Groot and Vonk 2018 NILR 320. 182 Institute for Human Rights and Development in Africa (IHRDA) and Open Society Justice Initiative on behalf of Children of Nubian Descent in Kenya v The Government of Kenya (ACERWC) case number 002/Com/002/2009 of 20 April 2009 para 42.
to ensuring that every child acquires a nationality and to prevent statelessness.
183
183 The African Committee of Experts General Comment on Article 6 of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (2014) para 23: "A State's compliance with the obligation to prevent and reduce statelessness starts from taking all necessary measures to ensure that all children born on its territory are registered. These include: children born out of wedlock children born to a parent or parents who are foreigners (including those whose parents are in an irregular immigration status, or who are refugees or asylum seekers), children whose parents are unknown, and all other groups at risk of non-registration."
To summarise, under international law the right to identity is an express and implicit, independent and distinctive right.
184
184 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 1. 185 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 1. 186 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 233. 187 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 233. 188 McCombs and Gonzalez 2007 https://scm.oas.org/pdfs/2007/cp19277.pDF 24. 189 Stewart 1992 Fam L Q 233.
5.2 Safeguarding the child's right to identity at the national level
5.2.1 Constitutional protection
The rights of children are embodied in the Constitution.
190
190 Sloth-Nielsen and Kruuse 2013 Int'l J Children's Rts 646. 191 Constitutional Court of South Africa date unknown https://www.concourt.org.za/ index.php/children-s-rights.
the drafters of the Constitution, in order to give children's rights a priority, devoted a special section to the rights of the child in the BOR.
192
192 One of the most significant aspects of the transition to democracy for South Africa was the adoption of a justiciable Bill of Rights which included an elaborate children's rights clause, inspired by the CRC. See Sloth-Nielsen and Kruuse 2013 Int'l J Children's Rts 646.
Section 28(1)(b) of the Constitution states that "a child has a right to family care or parental care".
193
193 Section 28(1)(b) of the Constitution. The Children's Act seeks to give effect to all the rights set out in s 28 of the Constitution. See Preamble of the Children's Act. 194 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 1.19. 195 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 1.19. 196 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 1.19. 197 Section 41 of the Children's Act; s 19 of the National Health Act 61 of 2003.
However, what is clear from section 28 of the BOR is the importance of a child's national identity.
198
198 Section 28(1)(a) of the Constitution. 199 Section 28(1)(a) of the Constitution. 200 Scalabrini 2019
https://www.scalabrini.org.za/news/birth-registration
. 201 Page Artificial Womb Technology 39. 202 Page Artificial Womb Technology 39.
Thus, a birth certificate serves as a crucial step to establishing a child's legal identity, which further protects the child's right to a national identity.
203
203 Selim 2019
https://www.unicef.org/stories/what-birth-registration-and-why-does-it-matter
. The right to a legal identity also encompasses the right to be afforded an identity document or card and a passport. See Page Artificial Womb Technology 39. 204 Page Artificial Womb Technology 39. For example, the child's right to access key social services such as education, health care and social grants. See SALRC Issue
Paper 32 (Project 140) v. Furthermore, without legal identity documents such as a birth certificate, the child would have to travel illegally. See UN Human Rights Council Birth Registration and the Right of Everyone to Recognition Everywhere as a Person Before the Law: Report of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights UN Doc A/HRC/27/22 (2014) para 30. In addition, there is a host of other consequences of not having a birth certificate. For example, a child may not be able to access health care and other social services. See Scalabrini 2019 https://www.scalabrini.org.za/news/birth-registration .
the child's disappearance may go undetected by national authorities, especially across international borders.
205
205 UN Human Rights Council Birth Registration and the Right of Everyone to Recognition Everywhere as a Person Before the Law: Report of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights UN Doc A/HRC/27/22 (2014) para 30. 206 UN Human Rights Council Birth Registration and the Right of Everyone to Recognition Everywhere as a Person Before the Law: Report of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights UN Doc A/HRC/27/22 (2014) para 30. 207 Page Artificial Womb Technology 39.
5.2.2 Legislation
Assisted reproduction is regulated in South Africa by the National Health Act 61 of 2003 (NHA) and the Regulations Relating to Artificial Fertilisation of Persons, 2016.
208
208 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 2.9. See GN 251 of GG 44321 of 25 March 2021.
The Regulations refer to embryo donation in only a single instance with regard to the establishment of a Central Data Bank:
The Director-General shall establish an electronic central data bank into which all information regarding gamete and embryo donations is stored.
209
209 GN 1165 in GG 40312 of 30 September 2016 para 5.
The effect of the non-disclosure of the identity of the donating couple has been discussed at length in existing publications. Despite the issues raised in connection with the anonymity of the donor couple, the NHA requires that the identities of the donors remain undisclosed.
210
210 Mande Building Families 232.
No person may disclose the identity of any person who donated a gamete or received a gamete, or any matter related to the artificial fertilisation of such gametes, or reproduction resulting from such artificial fertilisation except where a law provides otherwise or a court so orders.
211
211 Section 19 of the National Health Act 61 of 2003.
Similarly, the Children's Act further prohibits a child born as a result of artificial fertilisation from having access to the identity of gamete donors.
212
212 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 1.20. 213 Section 42(1) of the Children's Act. 214 AB case para 155. 215 AB case para 155. 216 AB case para 164.
It is clear that the above pieces of legislation prohibit the disclosure of the identities of the donating couple. In other words, the donating couple will remain anonymous, and the child born through embryo donation will have no right to learn of the identities of her/his biological parents.
217
217 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) para 2.9. 218 Mande Building Families 232.
5.2.3 Law reform
In May 2017 the South African Law Reform Commission released a project titled "The Right to Know One's Own Biological Origins" to initiate debate and to stimulate responses which would form the foundation for the investigation into children's right to know their biological origins.
219
219 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) ii. 220 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) iii. 221 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) v. 222 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) 14. 223 SALRC Issue Paper 32 (Project 140) 179.
persons and proposed amendments by the Department of Health will be implemented remains to be seen.
224
224 GN 251 in GG 44321 of 25 March 2021.
6 Concluding remarks
In summation, both the NHA along with its accompanying Regulations, and the Children's Act fail to protect the child's right to identity since both prohibit the disclosure of the identities of the donor couple. Moreover, the Constitution's provision on children's rights is unhelpful due to the lack of clarity around the definition of "family care or parental care". However, like international law the Constitution recognises the importance of protecting the child's national identity, and through the initiative of registering its population through the issuing of birth certificates recognises the child's family identity. Neither the South African legislative framework nor the CRC nor the ACRWC explicitly uphold the child's right to an identity.
225
225 Ronen 2004 IJLPF 148. 226 Although an effort has been made in the realm of surrogacy procedures. Mande Building Families iv.
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List of Abbreviations
ACERWC |
African Committee of Experts on the Rights |
---|---|
ACRWC |
African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child |
ART |
Assisted Reproductive Technologies |
BMC Pediatrics |
BioMed Central Pediatrics |
BOR |
Bill of Rights |
BYU Scholars Archive |
Brigham Young University Scholars Archive |
Case W Res L Rev |
Case Western Reserve Law Review |
CRC |
Convention on the Rights of the Child |
CRC Committee |
Committee on the Rights of the Child |
ECHR |
European Convention on Human Rights / European Convention for the Protection of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms |
Fam L Q |
Family Law Quarterly |
Ga J Int'l & Comp L |
Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law |
---|---|
ICCPR |
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights |
IJLPF |
International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family |
Int'l J Children's Rts |
International Journal of Children's Rights |
J Med Ethics |
Journal of Medical Ethics |
NHA |
National Health Act 61 of 2003 |
NILR |
Netherlands International Law Review |
SAMJ |
South African Medical Journal |
SALRC |
South African Law Reform Commission |
UDHR |
Universal Declaration of Human Rights |