Negrense woman obtains birth certificate at 101 years old

By Nanette Guadalquiver

July 19, 2023, 7:00 pm

<p><strong>BIRTH CERTIFICATE</strong>. Enriquita Quillano Olitan, a 101-year-old woman from Kabankalan City, Negros Occidental, receives her birth certificate from OIC City Civil Registar Monalisa Tabujara (left) and PhilSys Birth Registration Assistance Program (BPRAP) agent Jesirie Marie Gedorio at her residence in Barangay Tampalon on July 13, 2023. She was able to finally register her birth and obtain a certificate for free under the BPRAP being implemented by the Philippine Statistics Authority. <em>(Photo courtesy of PSA-Negros Occidental)</em></p>

BIRTH CERTIFICATE. Enriquita Quillano Olitan, a 101-year-old woman from Kabankalan City, Negros Occidental, receives her birth certificate from OIC City Civil Registar Monalisa Tabujara (left) and PhilSys Birth Registration Assistance Program (BPRAP) agent Jesirie Marie Gedorio at her residence in Barangay Tampalon on July 13, 2023. She was able to finally register her birth and obtain a certificate for free under the BPRAP being implemented by the Philippine Statistics Authority. (Photo courtesy of PSA-Negros Occidental)

BACOLOD CITY – A 101-year-old woman from Kabankalan City, Negros Occidental has finally obtained a birth certificate in official security paper (SECPA) through the Philippine Identification System (PhilSys) Birth Registration Assistance Program (PBRAP) of the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA).

Enriquita Quillano Olitan, who was born on Sept. 5, 1921, became the province’s oldest PBRAP beneficiary when she received her birth document at her residence in the remote Purok Narra 1, Barangay Tampalon on July 13.

The centenarian was feted in a simple ceremony, where OIC City Civil Registar Monalisa Tabujara and PBRAP agent Jesirie Marie Gedorio awarded her a birth certificate in the official SECPA.

Edwin Guiking, PBRAP focal person and registration officer II of PSA-Negros Occidental, said on Wednesday that individuals who have no birth registration can process the issuance of their birth certificate for free under the assistance program.

“Based on the records provided by the barangay, she (Olitan) is one of the residents who still doesn’t have a birth certificate that’s why it was processed. Considering that she is already a centenarian yet she still doesn’t have a birth document,” Guiking told the Philippine News Agency (PNA).

Gedorio and the team from City Civil Registry Office had to walk for an hour from the area their service vehicle could reach to be able to deliver Olitan’s birth certificate.

They were joined by the barangay officials along with City Social Welfare and Development Office head Cyril Ramos and Mayor’s Office Executive Assistant Pastor John Antolo, who brought a wheelchair for the centenarian.

The PBRAP, being implemented by the PSA in collaboration with the Department of the Interior and Local Government and the local government units, aims to increase civil registration, especially in marginalized communities such as the Indigenous Peoples, Muslim Filipinos and the poorest sector to ensure that all births of Filipinos are registered in the Local Civil Registry Offices. (PNA)



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