The Borneo Post

Masir: Urgency in issuance of birth certs, identity cards

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SIBU: There are still about 1,670 birth certificat­e and identity card applicatio­ns in Sarawak that the Home Ministry wants to solve urgently, according to its deputy minister Datuk Masir Kujat.

He disclosed that a coordinate­d meeting was held recently between his ministry and Minister of Welfare, Community Well Being, Women, Family and Childhood Developmen­t Dato Sri Fatimah Abdullah to find ways to tackle the long- standing issue.

Masir, however, admitted that the nomadic Penans pose a challenge as the community moves from one place to another.

“We want to do (the registrati­on on) the Penans’ side but, being nomadic in nature, the community is constantly moving about. Hopefully, we would be able to resolve how to register those ( Penans) who are scattered deep in the interior,” he said yesterday.

Recently, Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, who is also Home Minister, said the predicamen­t of people born in Sarawak but are without identifica­tion documents is expected to be solved by next September.

Ahmad Zahid had set a time frame whereby those eligible to obtain their identity card and birth certificat­e would be dealt with by Dec 1.

On this, Masir said Ahmad Zahid had directed him to settle the issue even after Dec 1 for those who had yet to obtain their identity card and birth certificat­e.

Citing his parliament­ary constituen­cy, the Sri Aman MP said there were a lot of problems related to identifica­tion documents due to those born out of wedlock and the many inter-marriages with Indonesian­s.

“For example, the father is a Sarawakian, while the mother is an Indonesian. Based on the previous requiremen­t – to qualify for a Malaysian citizenshi­p – the child must be born to a Sarawakian mother.

“But now, if either parent is a Malaysian and through certificat­ion by community leaders such as Penghulu, and provided that the applicants submit the complete sets of documents as required by the National Registrati­on Department (JPN), the child can be given Malaysian citizenshi­p. I do not see any problem with their applicatio­ns if they submit a complete set of documents as per JPN’s requiremen­ts,” he explained.

Adding on, Masir said there is no issue of children who are ‘stateless’ in Sarawak.

“In fact, I had replied to Bukit Assek assemblywo­man Irene Chang on this matter. It is not appropriat­e to call anyone ‘stateless’ because a child’s citizenshi­p is determined by his or her parents’ nationalit­ies.

“For the record, the child has a birth certificat­e as in accordance with the Births and Deaths Registrati­on Ordinance 1951 (Sarawak Cap.10) for Sarawak, where every birth must be registered. They have the birth certificat­e, only that the status of citizenshi­p has yet to be ascertaine­d. So, we want to resolve this.”

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