Recommended Practice based on International Guidelines
The law should provide that registration is available to, and compulsory for, all births occurring in every geographical area and for every population group in the country. Examples of possible discriminations are: sex; race ethnicity, religion or population group; marital status; nationality, citizenship, residency or refugee/asylum status; or any other characteristic such as prisoners or persons with disabilities
All births that occur in the country – including births to refugees, undocumented migrants, internally displaced persons, stateless persons, persons of undetermined nationality and members of nomadic peoples – must be registered in the civil registration system. Where necessary, legislation should include specific provisions to guarantee the registration of these populations regardless of whether the person has legal residency status.
Bangladesh
Legal Analysis
Birth registration is compulsory because the law also requires the parents of child (or other informant) to report the birth of the child to the registrar. However, registration is not universal. The law requires registrars to register the birth of any person born in their district or residing in their district "irrespective of race, religion, caste, clan or sex". Absent from this clause is "citizenship," and the Bangladesh government does not routinely register the births of refugees.