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From Shadows to Recognition: Bangladesh’s ‘Invisible’ Children Gain Identity

Children born in Bangladesh’s brothels are finally receiving birth certificates, granting them legal identity and access to education and services.

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From Shadows to Recognition: Bangladesh’s ‘Invisible’ Children Gain Identity

For years, they existed in the shadows—children born inside the brothels of Bangladesh without official recognition, often denied the most basic proof of identity. Now, a quiet but significant change is underway as many of these so-called “invisible” children are finally receiving birth certificates, opening doors to education, healthcare and legal protection.

In several of the country’s largest red-light districts, including the well-known settlement in Daulatdia, children of sex workers have historically faced layers of stigma and bureaucratic barriers. Without a registered birth, they could not enroll in school beyond early grades, obtain national identification cards, or access public services. Their lack of documentation effectively locked them out of formal society.

Under Bangladeshi law, every child has the right to birth registration. But in practice, mothers working in brothels often struggled to provide required information about fathers, permanent addresses, or other documentation demanded by local authorities. Social prejudice compounded the problem, leaving many applications stalled or rejected.

Recent efforts by local officials and advocacy groups, including the Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust, have focused on simplifying the process and ensuring that a father’s name is not mandatory for registration. By affirming a child’s right to identity regardless of parental circumstances, authorities are beginning to chip away at a long-standing administrative exclusion.

For families inside the brothels, a birth certificate represents more than paperwork. It is a shield against exploitation and early marriage, a ticket to formal schooling, and a step toward breaking intergenerational cycles of marginalization. Teachers and social workers say documented children are far more likely to remain in classrooms and pursue opportunities beyond the red-light district.

Challenges remain. Poverty, discrimination, and limited economic prospects still shape daily life in these communities. Yet the act of formal recognition signals a broader shift: acknowledgment that children should not inherit the stigma attached to their parents’ livelihoods.

As stacks of newly issued certificates are handed to mothers who once feared their children would remain unseen by the state, the message is clear. Legal identity does not erase hardship—but it lays the foundation for belonging. For Bangladesh’s once “invisible” children, that foundation may prove transformative.

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Sources

Reuters Associated Press The Guardian Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust

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