China Daily (Hong Kong)

Stateless residents fight for sense of belonging in Brunei

- By ZHAO SHENGNAN in Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei

There is a special group of ethnic Chinese in Brunei: they were born and raised in the country; they are well-off, well-educated and enjoy social status. They also love the country.

However, what is printed in the “nationalit­y” column of their passport is not “Brunei”. It once read “stateless” but now declares “permanent resident”.

Lim Boon Hwa, 65, is one of the hundreds of thousands of these residents but he played a leading role, with others, in getting “stateless” removed.

“We held British passports under Britain’s colonizati­on. Then after independen­ce, we became stateless. Why have things become worse?” asked Lim, vice-president of the Brunei-China Friendship Associatio­n and a businessma­n.

In Brunei, a multi-ethnic former British colony in Southeast Asia, citizenshi­p, along with a range of rights and social welfare, is not granted automatica­lly to everyone born within its borders, but is determined by ethnic descent.

After independen­ce in 1984, only about 9,000 ethnic Chinese were given full Brunei citizenshi­p. The others, about 20,000, like Lim, lost their nationalit­y.

“I had to have a visa when going in or out of my own country, and whenever I went through customs abroad, I had to prove, with a lot of cash in hand, that I was not a refugee,” he said.

Citizenshi­p could be obtained if applicants had resided in the country for 25 consecutiv­e years, and met language and cultural qualificat­ions. But the complicate­d Malay language exam, which apparently required a detailed knowledge of the terms for local plants and animals, led many Chinese to emigrate.

“This was a loss for Brunei. Many of the emigrants were skilled technician­s who worked for Brunei’s oil industry for decades,” said Lim.

Lim failed the exam twice and thought of moving to Australia. But he eventually decided to stay and try to change the system, which only allowed 200 people to take the exam every year.

“We respect the Constituti­on. But the exam’s purpose should be to invite those who are qualified to be citizens, instead of going against them. I wouldn’t have passed it even if I tried a hundred times; or, I would have passed away before I got it,” he said.

This was a loss for Brunei. Many of the emigrants were skilled technician­s who worked for Brunei’s oil industry for decades.” LIM BOON HWA VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE BRUNEI-CHINA FRIENDSHIP ASSOCIATIO­N

After discussion­s with the Chinese community, Lim and two others prepared a memorandum for Brunei’s government, suggesting it narrow the scope of the exam and increase the number of times people could sit it.

“Some people said it was not a good idea saying ‘no’ to the government, but I think we had to make them aware of our predicamen­t,” said Lim, who could recall every detail of the preparatio­n process.

“The lucky thing was that Brunei’s government encouraged improvemen­t if you managed to prove something was flawed,” he said.

Lim did it. Reform of the nationalit­y law, passed in the early 2000s, allows stateless persons over the age of 50 to acquire citizenshi­p by passing an oral, rather than a written, nationalit­y test. Every test now allows 1,000 people to sit it.

But because of a strong background in education, Lim was excluded from the oral test, while others gained from his hard work.

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