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United Arab Emirates: Nationality Matters

It’s been five years now since Refugees International first visited the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to better understand and then call for solutions on behalf of the country’s stateless population – the bidoon.  Since mid-2008 there have been a number of media reports indicating that change was afoot, and that efforts were being made to tackle statelessness through a one-time only special registration process.  So, when the possibility popped up of visiting the country last summer, we took it.

What we learned, though, was not exactly what we anticipated to find.  There was a real mix of opinions regarding how much these changes had actually helped the bidoon population. On one hand, authorities painted a fairly rosy picture of how the registration process had been rolled out and some of its beneficial consequences, intended or otherwise.  The bidoon themselves, on the other hand, painted a far less glowing picture of the same process and its impact on their lives.  
I’d really like to be able to take an official’s word as the authority on the matter while getting clarification on some important points. However, it’s not possible to be very complimentary in light of the accounts we heard from people who attempted to undergo the registration process.  The words of one young bidoon man protest loudly in my mind.  

In the UAE, the bidoon are represented by two major groups– Arabs (from neighboring countries) and non-Arabs (mainly from Iran and the Indian Sub-Continent) whose families settled in the Gulf generations ago as merchants or workers. Exact numbers of the bidoon in the UAE are not generally known and range from 10,000 to 100,000. While they’re not generally subject to deportation, they do face discrimination in the labor market and, as a result, encounter some serious socio-economic challenges. The bidoon have limited access to medical care and education, and without passports and other basic identity documents, their movement is restricted, both within UAE’s borders and internationally.

When I met him, a young man I’ll call Ilir had just gone through the registration process and was eager to resolve his statelessness through legal means.  Though born in the UAE, he had not been given a birth certificate. This, despite the fact that the UAE is party to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which include the right to an identity, registration and nationality.

This family of seven, including Ilir’s parents, had gone together to a designated registration site to pick up a copy of the 14-page application form.  Questions included the applicant’s name, nationality, whether the individual had traveled outside the country and to where, if they sent money to anyone outside the country and if so to whom and by what method.  Each individual was fingerprinted and videotaped making a statement about themselves.  Samples of saliva were collected, and then applicants were sent to another building for an eye scan.

The registration procedure continued with an additional three-step process.  Family members were taken individually and asked about their relationship to the people waiting outside the room.  In this case, the father of the family had documents providing evidence of residence in the country for several decades. “People who have been in the country longer, should get recognized first,” Ilir suggested.

On the day we met, Ilir said that for all the people he knows who went through the registration process around the same time that his family did, nothing has happened in 80 percent of the cases.  He doesn’t know anybody who got citizenship or nationality rights.  “The future is not getting better, it’s just unjust and unfair,” Ilir laments.  “After people got the new cards from this process, some 40 individuals lost their jobs.  My parents couldn’t get healthcare… Other people had problems getting married.”

One of Ilir’s friends, a man who I’ll call Khaled, had come along with Ilir to meet us.  I asked Khaled if he knew any stateless people who had been able to solve their problem.  He answered affirmatively.  When I subsequently asked about whether or how that person’s life had been changed as a result of his newly regularized legal status, Khaled was quick to respond.  “Every aspect of his life is different.  He got a job, and then a raise.  He feels safe and secure.”

Nationality matters.

Comments

well, its true.. still bidoon

well, its true.. still bidoon living in a bad situation and not allowed to get birth certificate for their kids and they are asked to show previous citiziship after the registration process ended or they will betreated as illegal people..

please help bedoon

Please help bedoon,uae goverment snatched all right from us

thank you for highlighting

thank you for highlighting this issue about UAE what you mentioned and heard is absolutely correct . I feel very frustrated when i hear that our government solved this problem . but unfortunately like you mentioned authorities painted a fairly rosy picture about registration process in fact it was not other than statistical process . am 31 years old female born in UAE .. i was lucky among my sisters and brothers to born in UAE in the period of highness Shaikh Zayed Bin Sultan . those times we didnt feel of all this discrimination what we are facing now . although we have no right of nationality but i was able to study in government schools and have my basic rights . things are becoming worse every day . now the bedoon population have limited access to medical care and education, and without passports and other basic identity documents, their movement is restricted, both within UAE’s borders and internationally. Imagine that you are not allowed to have a birth or death certificate in the country you are born I truly love my country despite of all injustice and discrimination( i say my country because i feel so) . i always had hope to be UAE national . but now as growing older and having childen am looking forward better future for them so i respectably request the United nation and Human rights to get me out of UAE as refugee to Canada as am qualified person if there is no hope be residence or have my rights in my country .

thanks

thanks for sharing!

statelessness in uae

the situation of bedoon people, many of them living uae more than three generation, is extremely miserable.uae is not serious to solve this issue.they have not any right ,can't get job ,no birth certificate,marriage certificate even driving licences for bedoon.no health facility?i want to ask un human right council what are you doing for us?are we human beings or animals?animals are better than us