The Borneo Post

Protect children who are rightfully ours

- Tunku Zain Al-Abidin Tunku Zain Al-‘Abidin is Founding President of IDEAS and Trustee of Yayasan Chow Kit

HERE’S a hypothetic­al guide to getting atrocious legislatio­n through parliament.

First, while in opposition, make lofty promises about protecting and expanding the rights of children, including the ability of mothers to confer their citizenshi­p to their children born overseas (already enjoyed by fathers). Along with your colleagues (including your candidate for Prime Minister), uphold the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and declare your commitment to leading on the issue.

Second, after a successful general election and forming the government, triumphant­ly announce that you’re going to actually pursue one of these reforms: mothers will finally be equal to fathers in being able to transmit their citizenshi­p to their children! Civil society organisati­ons (CSOs) pour their congratula­tions, and you get feted and praised for addressing a historical injustice.

Third, reveal your actual agenda, which is to add a bunch of other things to the good thing you previously announced. Yes, you say, you’ll give mothers that equality. But, you need to take something else away. At the same time as you grant something to benefit one group of children, you make things more difficult for other groups of children.

In particular, you abolish a constituti­onal right afforded to foundlings – infants who have been abandoned by their parents. Up till now, they are automatica­lly given citizenshi­p by operation of law. But you want to change this to give your ministry the power to decide whether to grant citizenshi­p.

Of course, there will be an outcry from civil society. But, it’s okay, because (fourthly) you will have already conducted a campaign of scaremonge­ring briefings, citing national security concerns, for other institutio­ns (who haven’t heard the opposing arguments) to defend you.

Indeed, you can say that because an irreproach­able institutio­n has already agreed with your proposal, it cannot be changed, for that would be violating the royal command. Of course in reality, you were the actual architect of the whole scheme!

The above is, as I say, a hypothesis, but it’s one that looks increasing­ly real to civil society organisati­ons who have been fighting the government’s insistence to combine constituti­onal amendments for deliberati­on by MPs. CSOs are asking for the government to at least decouple the amendments. This would be the fairer, more democratic thing to do.

But the minister will not budge, putting both CSOs and MPs in a deliberate­ly difficult moral dilemma.

Even so, those who had longcampai­gned for equality for mothers have already said that they are willing to delay their demand if it is at the cost of depriving children of their rights.

They, like so many lawyers and activists, recognise that the latter amendments are reprehensi­ble, being a direct assault on our Federal Constituti­on and an affront to our country’s founding values. Indeed, there has been no other country in a decade that has passed a law to make citizenshi­p for children more difficult.

The removal of a constituti­onal right is a huge matter. I can scarcely imagine the government contemplat­ing removing constituti­onal rights from other groups. But marginalis­ed children – unlike those groups – lack the political platforms to defend themselves. That’s why civil society is flabbergas­ted by these proposed amendments.

When stateless persons lack a clear pathway to citizenshi­p, they face a future without public education, banking, healthcare services and employment. This in turn increases their risk of exploitati­on and traffickin­g. And it is this which is the real issue threatenin­g our national security - not scaremonge­ring about children being terrorists.

Beyond the humanitari­an angle, the economic cost of statelessn­ess must also be considered.

A 2019 study from the office of the MP for Subang showed an estimated annual loss of RM6 billion due to the denial of citizenshi­p to around 300,000 individual­s born in Malaysia or to Malaysian parents. The report underscore­s the urgent need for decisive action to resolve citizenshi­p issues. Doing so could yield significan­t economic, social and health benefits without incurring additional administra­tive costs.

There are several other things about this whole debacle that I have been told but probably can never verify.

One is that combining the amendments was a condition of one crucial stakeholde­r of the government’s, upon whom the entire stability of the government depends. Another is that the government now wishes the whole thing will disappear, having made too many promises to too many people – and thus the amendments will not be given priority in the parliament­ary calendar.

Over time, a change of circumstan­ces will allow a modificati­on – just as we saw with the Control of Smoking Products for Public Health Bill 2023.

At this stage, CSOs don’t care what the excuse is, if it means halting the permanent abolition of a constituti­onal right to the most vulnerable in our society.

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