Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Citizenshi­p removal system targeting British Muslims’

-

CITIZENSHI­P-STRIPPING powers introduced in the UK since 2002 have enshrined a “second-class citizenshi­p”, mainly affecting Muslims, a Londonbase­d think tank said.

The Institute of Race Relations said in a report that the powers that allowed citizenshi­p to be removed without notice led to the creation of a lesser form of citizenshi­p.

While the government claimed only those whose actions posed grave threats to national security, or who committed abhorrent crimes would lose their citizenshi­p, the report argued that the ambiguous criteria for deprivatio­n increased the likelihood of arbitrary and discrimina­tory decisions.

Both Labour and Conservati­ve government­s have reportedly given ministers wider powers to revoke the citizenshi­p of those with access to another citizenshi­p – mainly ethnic minorities.

The targets were almost exclusivel­y “British Muslims of south Asian heritage,” said the report, which came amid the renewed controvers­y over the alleged smuggling of Shamima Begum into Syria when she was a school girl and in the wake of the Nationalit­y and Borders Act.

It recalled that in December 2013, then home secretary Theresa May had asserted “British citizenshi­p is a privilege, not a right” while revealing she had revoked the British citizenshi­p of 20 jihadists that year.

“The statement, repeated by successive Home Office ministers, is directed at Muslims, not at the British population as a whole, and is understood as such,” the report titled, Citizenshi­p: from right to privilege’, said.

For “native” Britons, UK citizenshi­p was an inalienabl­e, irrevocabl­e and unconditio­nal right, but was only a “withdrawab­le privilege”, for others – Britishbor­n, registered or naturalise­d citizens with another nationalit­y or access to one, it said.

Institute vice chair Frances Webber, who authored the report, said: “The message sent by the legislatio­n on deprivatio­n of citizenshi­p since 2002 and its implementa­tion largely against British Muslims of south Asian heritage is that, despite their passports, these people are not and can never be ‘true’ citizens, in the same way, that ‘natives’ are.”

“While a ‘native’ British citizen, who has access to no other citizenshi­p, can commit the most heinous crimes without jeopardisi­ng his right to remain British, none of the estimated six million British citizens with access to another citizenshi­p can feel confident in the perpetual nature of their citizenshi­p,” he wrote in the report.

 ?? ?? ‘UNFAIR’: The repo ai British citizenshi­p ha beco a ‘withdrawa e privileg
inly nic minorities
‘UNFAIR’: The repo ai British citizenshi­p ha beco a ‘withdrawa e privileg inly nic minorities

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom