Bangkok Post

Cate Blanchett backs drive to end plight of stateless

- EMMA BATHA THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION

Film star Cate Blanchett backs a global campaign to end the plight of an estimated 10 million people with no nationalit­y amid warnings rising xenophobia is stymieing efforts to meet a 2024 deadline for eradicatin­g statelessn­ess.

The double Oscar-winner spoke at a recent major meeting in Geneva aimed at persuading government­s to dramatical­ly escalate progress in the campaign called #Ibelong.

Blanchett’s attendance was to help boost attention on some of the world’s most invisible people.

Not recognised as nationals of any country, stateless people are often deprived of basic rights like education and healthcare, and risk exploitati­on and detention.

Blanchett interviewe­d Maha Mamo, a formerly stateless activist who has become a torchbeare­r for #Ibelong. As a goodwill ambassador for the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), Blanchett recently visited Bangladesh to meet stateless Rohingya who have fled Myanmar, and has met displaced Syrian families in the Middle East.

When UN chief Antonio Guterres launched the #Ibelong initiative in 2014, during his time as head of the UNHCR, he described statelessn­ess as a “cancer” that must be excised.

But the task ahead is monumental. Only about 200,000 people acquired citizenshi­p during the first half of the campaign, barely making a dent in the overall number.

And UN officials admit the total may now be even higher than in 2014 because of increasing displaceme­nt triggered by crises in Syria, Venezuela and elsewhere, which has raised the risk of many children growing up stateless.

There is no solution in sight for many of the largest groups of stateless people including the Rohingya, hundreds of thousands of whom have fled to Bangladesh following an upsurge in violence.

Experts on statelessn­ess spoke of “storm clouds on the horizon” as forced displaceme­nt, xenophobia and populism complicate efforts to meet the 2024 deadline.

They are keeping a close eye on India, where 1.9 million people in the northeaste­rn state of Assam have been left off a register of citizens, stoking concerns that many could become stateless.

DOGS HAVE MORE RIGHTS

People end up stateless for a host of historical, social and legal reasons including migration, flawed citizenshi­p laws and ethnic discrimina­tion. Others fall through the cracks when countries break up.

Aside from Myanmar, there are big stateless groups in Ivory Coast, Thailand, Nepal, Kuwait and some former Soviet countries.

Stateless people have said that they feel stigmatise­d and forgotten.

“We’ve had people telling us, ‘dogs are more important than I am’,” said Melanie Khanna, head of the UNHCR’s statelessn­ess section.

“People feel totally scarred and isolated. They often say, ‘I thought it was just me’. It sends chills down your spine.”

Despite slow progress on reducing numbers, Khanna said there was far greater global awareness of statelessn­ess than five years ago.

Almost all countries will be represente­d in Geneva, with more than 20 sending ministers. UN officials expect government­s to make scores of pledges, which will provide a road map for accelerati­ng the campaign.

In July, Kyrgyzstan made history when it became the first country to officially end statelessn­ess. UN officials believe Turkmenist­an, Tajikistan and Kazakhstan could also meet the 2024 deadline.

Thailand, where nearly 479,000 people are stateless, including members of ethnic hilltribes in the northern border regions, is also stepping up action.

The issue made internatio­nal headlines last year during rescue efforts to save a young Thai football team trapped in a flooded cave.

During the drama it emerged that several of the boys and their coach were stateless. They were granted citizenshi­p after their ordeal.

WIN-WIN

But resolving statelessn­ess is not just a human rights issue. Statelessn­ess has fuelled conflict and displaceme­nt in both Myanmar and Ivory Coast.

Khanna said there was a growing recognitio­n that resolving statelessn­ess was a “win-win” because it was in government­s’ interests to have everybody feel invested in the society they live in and motivated to contribute.

The UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs), a set of global pledges on tackling poverty, inequality and other ills with an overall ambition to “to leave no one behind”, have helped shift attitudes, Khanna said.

“The SDGs have allowed us to talk about this whole area as a developmen­t issue and not just a human rights one,” she added.

“This makes a lot of sense because you don’t want disenfranc­hised, impoverish­ed people on your territory.” Khanna said an increasing number of countries were changing their nationalit­y laws and policies to prevent future generation­s ending up in limbo.

Colombia, for example, has announced it will give citizenshi­p to thousands of children born to Venezuelan migrants to prevent them growing up stateless.

Other countries have scrapped discrimina­tory laws that prevent women passing their citizenshi­p to their children — a major cause of statelessn­ess.

The impact of such laws has been clearly seen during the Syrian war with many displaced mothers unable to obtain documents for their children where the father is dead or absent.

Iran became the latest country to pass reforms last week — a move human rights experts believe could help thousands of children obtain citizenshi­p.

There has also been a flurry of countries joining the UN convention­s on preventing and eliminatin­g statelessn­ess.

The 1961 convention stipulates that a state must grant nationalit­y to anyone born on its territory who would otherwise be stateless — a safeguard that would wipe out most new cases of statelessn­ess if adopted by all countries.

“Statelessn­ess causes devastatin­g and totally unnecessar­y damage,” Khanna said.

“But solutions aren’t complicate­d. The biggest obstacle is political will.”

 ??  ?? Cate Blanchett at the UN in Geneva, on Oct 7.
Cate Blanchett at the UN in Geneva, on Oct 7.

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