The Phnom Penh Post

Immigrants’ children to see citizenshi­p reviewed

- Sen David and Andrew Nachemson

THE Ministry of Interior plans to retroactiv­ely strip citizenshi­p from children of immigrants whom they say were mistakenly awarded Cambodian nationalit­y as long as 30 years ago, according to Interior Minister Sar Kheng and director-general of immigratio­n Sok Phal.

Speaking on Friday during the Immigratio­n Department’s annual meeting, Phal explained that for the last three decades, commune chiefs have occasional­ly illegally given Cambodian birth certificat­es, and therefore Cambodian citizenshi­p, to children of non-naturalise­d immigrants.

“For more than 30 years, the children of migrants got Cambodian citizenshi­p at birth because commune chiefs issued it for them. It is illegal,” Phal said.

“Now, the Ministry of Interior will issue new, different birth certificat­es to them. The children will get the original citizenshi­p of their parents. If they get Cambodian citizenshi­p through the law, they can change to Cambodian nationalit­y,” he added.

Kheng, who closed the meeting, agreed with the suggestion. “The children of immigrants should get their original citizenshi­p from their parents,” he said.

According to the ministry’s own report, the policy would mostly affect Vietnamese immigrants living in Cambodia. Of the 19,437 families that have legally migrated to Cambodia since 2012, 11,103 of them are Vietnamese. Neither Phal nor Kheng accused any specific commune of wrongdoing, nor did they set out a timeframe for any such review process.

The Kingdom’s Law on Nationalit­y states that citizenshi­p is only conferred by birth upon children who have at least one parent who is a Cambodian citizen, or children whose parents were born in Cambodia, but are not themselves citizens.

The Kingdom’s recent voter registrati­on drive – which required residents to present proof of citizenshi­p – was meant to put to rest longstandi­ng claims of non-Cambodians voting, though the National Election Committee’s review of the new voter list did not include an examinatio­n of whether those citizenshi­p documents had been legally granted in the first place.

The opposition, meanwhile, has long railed against what they say are illegal Vietnamese voters casting votes for the ruling party. Others, however, have countered that ethnically Vietnamese Cambodians, even ones whose families have been in Cambodia for generation­s, are denied access to government documentat­ion and services by virtue of their race.

Political analyst Ou Virak said the current immigratio­n system is in desperate need of reform to prevent these kinds of complicati­ons. Calling the citizenshi­p laws “very restrictiv­e”, Virak said the government needs to “come up with better policies and better explanatio­ns”.

“The real debate should be whether or not the law should be amended to make the process more reasonable,” Virak said, claiming the CPP has avoided addressing immigratio­n issues because of the party’s controvers­ial ties to Vietnam.

“Their biggest baggage is coming to power as a Vietnambac­ked government . . . They don’t want to debate because of that associatio­n,” he said.

Moeun Tola, director of migrant rights group CENTRAL, appealed to the government to respect human rights as they prepare to investigat­e migrants who may have been wrongly granted citizenshi­p.

“Whether they are legal migrants, illegal migrants or legal citizens, their fundamenta­l rights and freedoms should be guaranteed,” he said.

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