The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Chicken and egg situation for Penans

- Jenifer Laeng, Natasha Sim & Lim Huck Hai

This article was wri en as part of the Kiniacadem­y Investigat­ive Journalism programme. Field interviews were conducted in September and October last year. For the full story, log on to h ps:// fijiasia.com/ . Watch the video of this story at h ps://youtu. be/u7JNEnP8js­k

FOR the Penans, it is a chickenand-egg situation. They can’t solve their community’s problems including poverty if they don’t go to school and get a decent education. But they can’t go to school, if they don’t have identifica­tion papers.

It appears that the Penans have an entire system stacked against them. Unless the government is able to acknowledg­e their problems with the infrastruc­ture problems in rural areas, the issues of statelessn­ess will persist.

Lawyer Kamek for Change (LK4C) director Simon Siah said the main legal barriers for the situation are conditions in the federal constituti­on.

The federal constituti­on states that if a marriage is not registered, then citizenshi­p follows the mother.

“JPN (National Registrati­on Department) and the Home Ministry interpret this strictly and even a er the parents are properly married and reside in Malaysia, JPN still refuses to consider the child as a Malaysian citizen,” said Siah.

Kuala Lumpur-based lawyer Jasmine Wong concurs. She believes that the problem lies with a rigid interpreta­tion of the Federal Constituti­on.

Wong acted for a stateless Sarawak-born teenager who was adopted and was refused Malaysian citizenshi­p. The case is before the appellate court a er the High Court dismissed her applicatio­n to compel JPN to recognise the teenager as a citizen.

“In most cases, children who apply for citizenshi­p will apply under Article 15A and this will be rejected many times without any assurance that they will even be approved”, said Simon.

Speaking from experience, he said JPN officers will either brush aside applicants that come from low-income or illiterate families, or claim that the applicatio­ns are incomplete.

All the more reason that special task forces like the one headed by Sarawak’s Minister of Welfare, Community Wellbeing, Women, Family and Childhood Developmen­t Dato Sri Fatimah Abdullah, could be useful as they can vet and make recommenda­tions to the Home Ministry, said Siah.

But again, rejections are common and without any reasons given. Thus, applicants are required to go through the same process of making an applicatio­n all over again.

Home Minister Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin when winding up the debate on Supply Bill 2021 in the Parliament last December said that individual­s who do not have an identity card to be given a one-year period to submit valid documents to enable them to obtain citizenshi­p.

However, Selangau Member of Parliament Baru Bian whose office has been working with many stateless individual­s since 2013, urged the government to not limit the applicatio­n window to one year as communicat­ion and transport continues to be problemati­c in the remote areas of Sarawak.

“Transporta­tion and travel were and are still difficult in the remote areas and ge ing births registered with the government is impossible for many.

“This has caused their children and grandchild­ren to be labelled as nonMalaysi­ans as their parents or grandparen­ts have no citizenshi­p papers,” Baru said.

Malaysia is a signatory to the United Nations (UN) Convention of the Rights of the Child (CRC).

Article 7 of the CRC states that the child shall be registered immediatel­y a er birth and shall have the right to acquire nationalit­y, but Malaysia does not appear to apply this clause.

As experience has shown, simply having filed an applicatio­n and having the right documents will not guarantee citizenshi­p. Neither does being born in Malaysia ma er.

“Malaysia has made a lot of progress in the protection of children as we are the signatory to the Convention­s of Rights for Children. We now have the Child Act 2001 and other laws protecting children.

“But we maintain that Article 7 has not been implemente­d and the government has not given a satisfacto­ry answer to this,” said Siah.

Therefore, he believes that there would not even be a need to have a special task force once Article 7 is applied as JPN can award a child citizenshi­p upon birth.

It is a solution that breaks the cycle of stateless parents giving birth to stateless children.

“The government imposed many requiremen­ts and the biggest one of all is documentat­ion,” said Wong.

Her proposal to solve the problem is to also amend the Constituti­on to recognise a child’s right to citizenshi­p, as long as either one parent is a Malaysian, notwithsta­nding the marital status of parents, and to not discrimina­te between adoptive and biological parents.

 ??  ?? Jasmine Wong
Jasmine Wong
 ??  ?? Simon Siah
Simon Siah

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