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Op-Ed by Maureen Lynch, PhD.
Published by the International Herald Tribune
02/18/2005

The people who have no country ...
The uprooted I
There are millions of people in the world who are citizens of nowhere.
They cannot vote, they cannot get jobs in most professions, they cannot
own property or obtain a passport. These "stateless" people face
discrimination, sexual and physical violence and socioeconomic
hardship. Often they are denied access to health care and education.
The vulnerability of statelessness is captured in the words of a Bidoon
living in the United Arab Emirates who asks: "What have we done to be
treated like animals? We can't get a job and can't move around. We are
between the earth and the sky, like a boat without a port."
The 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights asserts that "everyone
has the right to a nationality." But statelessness remains a reality in
all regions of the world. The exact numbers are not known, but a
conservative estimate is 11 million stateless persons around the world.
They include groups whose situation is relatively well recognized, like
Europe's Roma, the Palestinians and the Kurds, and groups whose plight
is virtually unknown, like people from the former Soviet bloc, some of
Thailand's ethnic groups, the Bhutanese in Nepal, Muslim minorities in
Burma and Sri Lanka, and ethnic minorities of the Great Lakes region of
Africa like the Batwa "Pygmy" and the Banyamulenge.
The myriad causes of statelessness may include political upheaval,
targeted discrimination (often for reasons of race or ethnicity),
differences in laws between countries, laws relating to marriage and
birth registration, expulsion of a people from a territory, nationality
based only on descent (usually that of the father), abandonment and
lack of means to register children.
One stateless population that the world has neglected are 250,000 to
300,000 Biharis (also called stranded Pakistanis), who were stripped of
their citizenship after Bangladesh became a nation because they sided
with West Pakistan during the struggle for independence. For the past
two decades these people have lived in 66 squalid camps throughout
Bangladesh. Recently the Bangladeshi government cut food rations to
camps, forcing Bihari families to go without food for two or three days
in a row.
States have the right to determine the procedures and conditions for
acquisition and termination of citizenship, but statelessness and
disputed nationality can only be addressed by the very governments that
regularly breach the norms of protection and citizenship. To date, only
57 states are party to the 1954 Convention Relating to the Status of
Stateless Persons, and even fewer, just 29 states, are party to the
1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness. The United States
has not signed either one. And despite its mandate, only two staff
members in the office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees focus on
helping the world's stateless people.
The gap between rights and reality can be closed. Governments must
respect the right of all individuals to have a nationality. Countries
should sign and adhere to international standards to protect stateless
people and reduce statelessness by facilitating naturalization
processes. The office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees can be
strengthened as the lead agency in accordance with its mandate on
statelessness. The United States, whose aid budget often helps
countries who have stateless people within their borders, should
certainly require and evaluate the protection of stateless people.
Prevention and reduction of statelessness will contribute to the
promotion of human rights, to an improved quality of life for those
affected and to increased security around the globe. It will go a long
way toward bringing millions of people closer to freedom, which truly
gives the world its best hope for peace.
Stateless Biharis in Bangladesh: A Humanitarian Nightmare
Visual Mission: The Stateless Bihari of Bangladesh
Lives on Hold: The Human Cost of Statelessness
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