Gulf News

‘Europe must not lock up the stateless’

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European countries must stop locking up stateless people like criminals, human rights campaigner­s said, describing their detention as “a preventabl­e tragedy” that risks being worsened by the migrant crisis.

Thousands of stateless people are being held in immigratio­n detention centres across Europe even though they cannot be deported because no country recognises them as citizens, the campaigner­s said late on Monday.

They urged European government­s to introduce procedures for identifyin­g stateless people so they can be protected in the same way as refugees and given a chance to rebuild their lives.

There are an estimated 10 million stateless people worldwide. With no nationalit­y, they are denied basic rights most people take for granted, including access to education, healthcare and jobs. Many live in destitutio­n and risk detention and exploitati­on.

Francois Crepeau, UN special rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, said the immigratio­n detention of stateless people was “one of the silent tragedies of our globalised world”.

“It is a tragedy that is completely preventabl­e, but due to a lack of will and attention, continues to harm thousands of lives all around the world every year,” he said in a foreword to new guidelines on protecting stateless people from detention.

Chris Nash, director of the European Network on Statelessn­ess (ENS), which produced the guidance, said the detention of stateless people for long periods was an “extremely disturbing trend.” “Across Europe a failure by states to put in place effective systems to identify stateless persons leaves thousands exposed to repeated and lengthy detention,” he added.

Campaigner­s say there are likely to be stateless people among the hundreds of thousands arriving in Europe, as many of the countries they are fleeing, including Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n, have significan­t stateless population­s. The guidance, intended for lawyers, judges, legislator­s and policymake­rs, was issued a year after the UN launched a campaign to eradicate statelessn­ess in a decade.

Stateless people detained in Poland, the Netherland­s and Malta told ENS researcher­s they had been made to feel like criminals.

Kafil Kafil, an ethnic Rohingya from Myanmar, spent months in detention in Malta after being rescued off a burning boat in the Mediterran­ean. “The policewoma­n could not believe me when I said I came from Myanmar,” Kafil told ENS. “Nobody spoke my language and there was no translator.”

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