The Borneo Post

‘Children born overseas can get citizenshi­p by operation of law if father is Malaysian’

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PUTRAJAYA: Only children born overseas to Malaysian fathers who are married to foreign spouses are entitled to get citizenshi­p by operation of law, the Court of Appeal held.

Court of Appeal judge Datuk Seri Kamaludin Md Said in his written grounds of judgment of last Friday’s appellate court’s 2-1 majority decision in disallowin­g citizenshi­p to children born overseas to Malaysian mothers and foreign fathers, said the word ‘father’ in Section 1(b) of Part II of the Second Schedule of the Federal Constituti­on refers to the father only and is not intended to include the mother.

This means it precludes Malaysian mothers who are married to a non-Malaysian citizen from passing on their citizenshi­p status to their children who were born outside Malaysia.

In the grounds of judgment released Thursday, Justice Kamaludin said it was intended by the framers of the Federal Constituti­on that citizenshi­p by operation of the law of children born on or after Malaysia Day must follow the status of the father.

“In my view, the court should not question why the law was enacted or whether Parliament had addressed its mind in enacting the law but the court’s duty is to interpret the enacted law accordingl­y,” he said.

He said the remedy for Malaysian mothers who are married to foreign spouses to get Malaysian citizenshi­p for their children who were born overseas is provided under Article 15(2) of the Federal Constituti­on. Justice Kamaludin said the mothers’ grievances were not against the existing law of Article 15(2) which provided the remedy for them to apply for citizenshi­p for their children but against the approving authority or the system which is currently in place.

“The system can be improved or changed. I agree this issue needs to be addressed by the relevant authority,” he said.

He said it was his view that the High Court was re-writing the law in relation to the grant of citizenshi­p to children born outside Malaysia when it applied the existing law and policy already in force in a manner to find a remedy to the grievances of the mothers by interpreti­ng the word ‘father’ to be read as a mother.

The Court of Appeal’s 2-1 majority decision by Justice Kamaludin and Justice Datuk Azizah Nawawi allowed the appeal by the government, Home Ministry and National Registrati­on Department (JPN) director-general to reverse the High Court’s decision declaring that children born overseas to Malaysian mothers who married foreigners are entitled to citizenshi­p by operation of law.

Justice Datuk S Nantha Balan dissented.

The appeal involved the Associatio­n of Family Support & Welfare Selangor & Kuala Lumpur (Family Frontiers) and six Malaysian women who are married to foreigners who wanted a court order for all relevant government agencies, including the JPN, Immigratio­n Department and Malaysian embassies, to issue documents relating to citizenshi­p (including passports and identity cards) to children born abroad to Malaysian mothers with foreign spouses.

On the same day, the same appellate court panel also dismissed an appeal by a 24-yearold woman Mahisha Sulaiha Abdul Majeed against the High Court’s decision in 2020, which rejected her suit filed to seek a declaratio­n that she is entitled to be a Malaysian citizen.

In his grounds of judgment, Justice Kamaludin also said the parliament­ary process is a better way of resolving issues involving controvers­ial and complex questions arising out of moral and social dilemma.

He also said Article 14(1)(b) of the Federal Constituti­on and section 1(b) of Part II of the Federal Constituti­on were not discrimina­tory against women.

Article 14(1)(b) states every person born on or after Malaysia Day, fulfilling any of the conditions in Part II of the Second Schedule of the Federal Constituti­on are a citizen by operation of law, while section 1(b) of Part II of the Second Schedule of Federal Constituti­on states every person born outside the Federation whose father is at the time of the birth of a citizen, are citizens by operation of law.

In the minority judgment which ruled in favour of the mothers, Justice Nantha Balan said it was untenable for the government to say that there is no discrimina­tion against Malaysian mothers who are unable to pass on their citizenshi­p to their children who were born overseas.

“There is no doubt that Article 14(1) (b) read together with Section 1(b) of the Second Schedule of the Federal Constituti­on is totally and inherently discrimina­tory of the rights of Malaysian mothers whose children were deprived of citizenshi­p by operation of law solely because their spouses are foreigners and because the children were born overseas,” he said.

He said the word ‘father’ in Section 1(b) Part II of the Second Schedule of the Federal Constituti­on should be read in a non-discrimina­tory way to include ‘mother’ as by virtue of Article 8(2) of the Federal Constituti­on, it will be unconstitu­tional to practise gender discrimina­tion by recognisin­g the blood descent of the father but not that of the mother for purposes of according citizenshi­p to children born overseas.

The Court of Appeal panel had also made it clear in last Friday’s decision that the status quo should be maintained for overseas-born children of the six Malaysian mothers who had obtained citizenshi­p, pending disposal of their appeal to the Federal Court. — Bernama

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