Photo: Shervorn Monaghan/IRIN. Stateless people are vulnerable to arrest and detention
LONDON, 7 November 2014 (IRIN) - It is now 60 years since stateless
people received recognition in international law, and the UN has two
conventions (1954 and 1961) dedicated to their protection and the
regularization of their situation. Yet an estimated 10 million people
worldwide still suffer the problems and indignities of having no
nationality.
“It may be a bit of understatement to say that these are the two least
loved multilateral human rights treaties,” said Mark Manly, head of the
UN Refugee Agency’s (UNHCR) statelessness unit. “For many years they
were pretty much forgotten and that was in large part because they had
no UN agency promoting them.”
Manly has responsibility for the issue of statelessness, even though
most stateless people neither are, nor have ever been, refugees, and
this week UNHCR launched an ambitious plan to try to end statelessness over the next 10 years.
The plan breaks down the issue into 10 action points, addressing the
main reasons why people end up stateless. Sometimes it's because
children were not registered at birth, or because discriminatory laws
prevent their mothers from passing on their own nationality. Some are
the victims of ethnic discrimination by countries which refuse to
recognize members of their community as citizens; others, especially in
Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, have fallen down the cracks
between countries, as it were, after boundaries were redrawn and states
divided.
In some of the world's major situations of statelessness UNHCR is
already involved. In 1989 tens of thousands of Black African
Mauritanians fled to Senegal to get away from murderous ethnic
persecution. A large number of the refugees who came scrambling across
the river border had no papers. Their Mauritanian identity cards had
been confiscated or torn up by members of the security forces or by
their fellow citizens, who told them, “Tu n'est pas Maure; alors tu
n'est pas Mauritanian” (You are not a Moor, an Arab, so you are not a
Mauritanian).
Senegalese nationality law is generous, and allows them to apply for
citizenship after five years' residence, but many have preferred to go
home to Mauritania, assisted by UNHCR which supplied them with travel
documents under an agreement governing their return. But large numbers
are now finding themselves effectively stateless. Manly told IRIN: “What
that agreement says, if I remember correctly, is that the nationality
of the refugees is 'presumed' - they are presumed to be Mauritanian.
However, many people have faced real problems in getting the
documentation to prove that they really are Mauritanian, so there is
clearly an issue.”
“Some 24,000 have returned,” adds Bronwen Manby, a consultant who has
worked on this issue. “But the Mauritanian organizations are telling us
that only about a third have got their documents. It's the standard sort
of situation,” she told IRIN, “where in principle, of course - but then
documents were destroyed, and then they find that the name is Mohamed
with one 'm' instead of Mohammed with two 'm's, and then it's in French
and not in Arabic - there needs to be more pressure on the Mauritanian
government to sort out the situation.”
Laws discriminating against women
In the Middle East a lot of statelessness is the result of laws
discriminating against women, which only allow nationality to be passed
through the father - a problem if the father is not there to register
his child or is himself stateless. Laura van Waas, who runs the
Statelessness Programme at Tilburg University, says it can have a
devastating effect on all members of a family.
“It's not just the stateless child who is affected by this. It's the
mother, who has nationality, who feels guilty for whom she has chosen to
marry. Her children are suffering and she sees that as the result of
her life choices. And it's the young men who are perhaps the worst
affected. This is seen as a women's rights issue, but if you are a young
women who couldn't get nationality through your mother, in most of the
countries we are looking at you can acquire nationality through your
husband, and your children will take his nationality. But if you are a
young stateless man, you can't acquire nationality through marriage, and
because your children have to acquire their nationality through you,
they will also be stateless.”
In countries like Lebanon, where ID cards were first introduced in the
1920s, but not everyone bothered to register, this kind of statelessness
has persisted through several generations, resulting in whole families
which, although Lebanese, are non-citizens, unable to travel, and with
no access to state schooling or health care. It could be sorted out with
a bit of goodwill, but as in many countries, political considerations -
in this case questions of religious and ethnic balance - mean goodwill
may be in short supply.
Egypt and Kuwait provide further examples.
In situations like that of Myanmar, where the government is so reluctant
to accept the Muslim community in Rakhine State as Burmese citizens,
goodwill seems totally lacking. But elsewhere a lot can be done to
reduce statelessness, with improvements to nationality laws, better
coordination when states and boundaries change, simpler bureaucratic
procedures, and a greater effort to make sure all children get
registered.
Attitudes changing?
Manly says he is seeing a real change of attitudes, with governments
increasingly willing to ratify the conventions, enter into discussions
on the issue and make the necessary changes.
“The taboo has now been broken,” he says. “Governments now increasingly
accept that this is not purely an issue of their sovereign discretion,
but that issues of statelessness are of legitimate concern for the
international community... Governments have also perceived that it is
not in their interests to have a very large disenfranchized and
frequently undocumented population in their territories... Ministries of
the interior round the world don't want to have tens or hundreds of
thousands of people who are undocumented. They want to know who is in
their territory, and to be able to control them.”
“In the past four years, more countries have acceded to the 1961
Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness than in the four decades
following its adoption,” says the new UNHCR report.
So the UNHCR is hopeful that their campaign can bring down the numbers
of stateless people in areas like the Middle East and the Former Soviet
Union.
But Bronwen Manby warns that in parts of Africa where she has worked, a
push to regularize citizenship could actually increase numbers
elsewhere. “Nigeria, for instance, has a large number of people who are
absolutely undocumented, but everybody somehow gets by, because that's
Nigeria. But it's of concern in the context of increasing efforts to
reduce the number of undocumented people for security reasons. Once you
really start being strict about ID documents, all the people who have
managed to get by with a bit of cash, or a bit of magouille, as they say
in French, are going to find it much more difficult to get an ID from
somewhere, and I think a problem of statelessness is going to be
revealed which is already there but has never been identified.”