Iran Daily

UNHCR: World’s stateless deserve nationalit­y

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An estimated 10 million people worldwide are stateless, including three million officially, a status that deprives them of an identity, rights, and often jobs, the United Nations refugee agency said on Friday.

Muslim Rohingyas in Buddhist-majority Myanmar form the world’s biggest stateless minority, with some 600,000 having fled violence and repression since late August and taken refuge in Bangladesh, it said, according to Reuters.

In a report, “This Is Our Home” — Stateless Minorities and their Search for Citizenshi­p,” the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) called on government­s to end the discrimina­tory practice by 2024.

“If you live in this world without a nationalit­y, you are without an identity, you are without documentat­ion, without the rights and entitlemen­ts that we take for granted ... having a job, having education, knowing that your child belongs somewhere,” Carol Batchelor, director of UNHCR’S division of internatio­nal protection, told a news briefing.

UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards said 3.2 million people in 75 countries were known to be stateless, having been registered or counted by government­s. But the estimated total is 10 million, including large population­s in countries including Indonesia, Ivory Coast, Lebanon and the Democratic Republic of Congo, he said.

Government­s should give nationalit­y to people born on their territory if they would otherwise be stateless, and facilitate naturaliza­tion for longtime stateless residents, UNHCR said.

Other stateless groups — many of whom have lived for generation­s in their homelands — include many Syrian Kurds, the Karana of Madagascar, Roma in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and the Pemba of Kenya, the report said.

“We need to ensure that there is not a deliberate, arbitrary exclusion or deprivatio­n of nationalit­y,” Batchelor said.

Asked whether Rohingya fell into the category of those deliberate­ly excluded and deprived of nationalit­y, Batchelor said: “We can only look at the result ... Myanmar has a nationalit­y law. It outlines categories of persons that are considered to be citizens of Myanmar. The Rohingya are not on that list.”

Some 30,000 stateless people in Thailand have acquired nationalit­y since 2012 and the Makonde, a community of 4,000, became Kenya’s 43rd officially recognized tribe last year, the report said.

“We are seeing reductions in Thailand, in Central Asia, in Russia, in western Africa. But the numbers are not nearly as substantia­l as they would need to be for us to end statelessn­ess by 2024,” said Melanie Khanna, head of UNHCR’S statelessn­ess section.

 ??  ?? HANNAH MCKAY/REUTERS Rohingya refugees continue their way after crossing from Myanmar into Palong Khali, near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, on November 2, 2017.
HANNAH MCKAY/REUTERS Rohingya refugees continue their way after crossing from Myanmar into Palong Khali, near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, on November 2, 2017.

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