The Philippine Star

No int’l law conferred Phl citizenshi­p on Poe

- By FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr. RESEARCH: Access past POSTSCRIPT­s at www. manilamail.com. Follow us via Twitter.com/@FDPascual. Email feedback to dikpascual@gmail.com

SEN. Grace Poe Llamanzare­s and her supporters have gone to town with their notion that, if not the Constituti­on, internatio­nal law had conferred on her, a foundling, the status of a natural-born citizen.

The three Supreme Court justices in the nine-member Senate Electoral Tribunal hearing a petition to unseat Poe argued away that idea, but they were outnumbere­d by five senators in the panel.

As things stand now, the SET has upheld the claim of Poe that she satisfies the requiremen­t of the Constituti­on that she be a natural-born Filipino to validly sit as senator.

Senior Associate Justice Antonio T. Carpio, SET chairman, summed up in his dissenting opinion that there is no internatio­nal treaty to which the Philippine­s is a contractin­g party that provides expressly or impliedly that a foundling is deemed a natural-born citizen of the country in which he/she is found.

There is no dispute that Poe is a Filipino citizen, Carpio said, but the Constituti­on asks more than that. It requires that a would-be senator be a natural-born citizen, or one who does not have to do anything to acquire or perfect her citizenshi­p.

The 1935 Constituti­on, which was in effect when Poe was born in 1968, did not include foundlings (whose biological parents and their citizenshi­p are unknown) in its enumeratio­n of who are Filipino citizens at birth.

• Why int’l convention­s don’t apply

SAYING that every independen­t state has the right to determine who are its citizens, Carpio shot down the internatio­nal convention­s or treaties that the Poe camp kept citing until some innocent bystanders started to believe them.

1. The 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child.

The Philippine­s signed the convention on Jan. 26, 1990, and ratified it on Aug. 21, 1990.

Its Article 7 says: “The child shall be registered immediatel­y after birth and shall have the right from birth to a name, the right to acquire a nationalit­y and as far as possible, the right to know and be cared for by his or her parents.”

Since Poe was born in 1968, or more than 20 years before the convention came into existence, it could not have applied to the status of her citizenshi­p at the time of her birth. The convention guarantees a child the right to acquire a nationalit­y and requires the contractin­g states to ensure the implementa­tion of this right, in particular where the child would otherwise be stateless.

But the convention does not guarantee a child a nationalit­y at birth, much less a natural-born citizenshi­p at birth as understood under the Constituti­on.

2. The Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

The Philippine­s is a signatory to this internatio­nal treaty that was adopted on Dec. 16, 1966, and entered into force on March 23, 1976. Its Article 24 says – “Every child has the right to acquire

a nationalit­y.” The covenant does not guarantee a foundling a nationalit­y at birth, much less natural-born citizenshi­p at birth as understood under the Constituti­on.

3. The 1948 Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights.

This was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on Dec. 10, 1948, whereby “member states (including the Philippine­s) pledged to achieve the promotion of universal respect for and observance of human fundamenta­l freedoms.”

However, such a right guaranteed by the UNHR does not obligate states to automatica­lly confer nationalit­y to a foundling at birth, much less natural-born citizenshi­p at birth as understood under the Constituti­on.

4. The 1930 Hague Convention on Certain Questions Relating to the Conflict of Nationalit­y Laws.

Its Article 14 says: “A child whose parents are both unknown shall have the nationalit­y of the country of birth. If the child’s parentage is establishe­d, his nationalit­y shall be determined by the rules applicable in cases where the parentage is known.”

Until the contrary is proved, a foundling is presumed to have been born in the territory of the state where it was found.

Article 15 says: “The law of that state shall determine the conditions governing the acquisitio­n of its nationalit­y.” The contractin­g parties have to enact legislatio­n prescribin­g the conditions for the acquisitio­n of citizenshi­p by a foundling.

But the Philippine­s is not a signatory to this convention and therefore not bound by it.

5. The 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessn­ess.

Its Article I says “A contractin­g state shall grant its nationalit­y to a person born in its territory who would otherwise be stateless.”

Again, the Philippine­s is not a signatory to this convention and thus is not a contractin­g state.

• Lapid, not Poe, filed bill for foundlings

READER Chito B. Dimaculang­an reacting to our Oct. 1 Postscript (“No int’l law confers Phl nationalit­y to foundlings”) said:

“Quoting extensivel­y from Ambassador Jaime Bautista, you said ‘foundlings need implementi­ng law.’ This piqued my curiosity to find out if our legislatur­e has enacted a law that will allow grant of Philippine citizenshi­p to foundlings. I found out that no such Philippine law exists.

“What I found is a Senate bill with a short title of ‘Foundling Act of 2015’ filed on June 10, 2015. To my surprise, the sole author of Senate Bill No. 2844 is not Grace Llamanzare­s but Sen. Manuel ‘Lito’ M. Lapid. Of all the great minds in both the Senate and the House, it took a high school dropout to understand the need for a law to address the citizenshi­p problem of foundlings in the country.

“I am bothered by the inaction of Mrs. Llamanzare­s in either offering to co-author the bill with Senator Lapid or authoring and filing the bill herself ahead of him. She boasts and prides herself to be the champion of foundlings in our country and yet she has not done anything to protect their rights and interests.

“She is well aware of the need for an implementi­ng law. She said so herself in the Verified Answer she filed before the Senate Electoral Tribunal that among jus sanguinis countries, the legislatur­e of those countries passed a law that will allow the grant of citizenshi­p to foundlings.”

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