Five reasons why you should care about statelessness

If we don’t work to ensure that everyone in Europe and the world has a nationality, this purely man-made problem will continue to be passed from one generation to the next.

UN Refugee Agency
Dec 4, 2017 · 5 min read
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Nuzret Hodzic, a stateless man living in Montenegro, says that without a nationality he feels like a shadow. © UNHCR/Nena Lukina

By: Aikaterini Kitidi

At a recent meeting in the European Parliament, a cross-party group of parliamentarians called on member states and the European Commission to do away with a social injustice affecting thousands of people in the Western Balkans: the lack of birth certificates and nationality for Roma children and adults, which has a devastating impact on their daily lives.

The problem is of grave concern not only to the Roma, but also to other stateless people in Europe, whose number rises to hundreds of thousands. Statelessness creates a chasm between them and the wider community, threatening the cohesion of our society as a whole.

If we don’t work to ensure that everyone in Europe and the world has a nationality, this purely man-made problem will continue to be passed from one generation to the next.

Here are five key reasons why statelessness should constitute an ever-present concern.

1. By the time you finish reading this post, another child may be born without a nationality

The main reason behind their statelessness is discrimination. Most people are denied a nationality due to their histories, their looks, their language or their faith. Exclusion and persecution often describe the existence of the world’s stateless populations.

“You’re a shadow here… Just a shadow. You pass by and no one sees you. You have no rights. Like a man living normally, just walking and working, and all of a sudden he loses a leg. And then, he is disabled. This is what this situation has done to me,” said Nuzret Hodzic, a stateless man living in Montenegro.

2. Statelessness may affect people in your community or country

In addition, in the states that once made up Yugoslavia, groups of people fell through the cracks of the new legislation, becoming stateless. Though many have managed to establish their nationality, members of minority groups, especially Roma, continue to face difficulties.

In many countries across the continent, gaps in nationality laws continue to create statelessness at birth and later in life.

Stateless people are not asking for special treatment. They are only asking for equal treatment

These stateless people are not asking for special treatment. They are only asking for equal treatment — the chance to have the same opportunities as all citizens. “One day, I presented my stateless document to the bank. They asked me ‘where is this country “Stateless” located?’”, explained Anastasia Trevogin, a formerly stateless woman living in France.

3. Statelessness can take away basic rights that most of us take for granted

The inability to secure documentation can deprive people from legal or sustainable employment, and from obtaining licenses or loans. Thus it can trap them in an unending cycle of poverty, making them vulnerable to exploitation and increasing anxiety for their physical safety and security.

Nino, a stateless young woman from Georgia, saw her dreams put on hold due to her lack of nationality: “I have been playing [the trombone] for years, but because I am stateless, I couldn’t continue my studies at the conservatory to have a profession that I dream of. The only job which I can have with my current status is being a babysitter.”

4. Statelessness is a key aspect of the fastest-growing refugee emergency of our time

Here are some key moments in the first 100 days of the Myanmar crisis.

The Syria conflict is another crisis where we see links between forced displacement and risks of statelessness. A 2014 assessment found that the conflict has left many women without their husbands and many times without a marriage certificate which puts their children at risk of statelessness, as Syrian children born outside Syria as refugees can only acquire nationality through their fathers. Adults also face the risk of statelessness when their documentation is lost, destroyed or confiscated due to the conflict or displacement.

Although the majority of stateless people in Europe were born in the region, there are also stateless migrants and refugees who have come from other areas with known stateless populations, including Syria, Afghanistan, Cote d’Ivoire and Iraq.

5. It is up to your governments to end this injustice

The ultimate solution to statelessness is the granting of nationality. But until this is achieved, it is important that stateless people enjoy their basic human rights, allowing them to live in dignity. In order to achieve this, governments in Europe should ensure that:

  • Stateless persons or persons whose citizenship is undetermined acquire or confirm their citizenship.
  • No child is born stateless by granting citizenship automatically at birth to all children born in Europe who are otherwise stateless.
  • All children born in Europe are registered at birth regardless of their parents’ nationality, documentation or legal status so that every child’s legal identity is established and the risk of statelessness is reduced.
  • Stateless migrants are identified and protected and the naturalization of stateless migrants and refugees is facilitated.
  • All European countries are parties to both UN Statelessness Conventions.

Aikaterini Kitidi is a communications officer at UNHCR. Click here for more information on how to take action to end statelessness.

This article was originally published by Euronews.

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UN Refugee Agency

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The official account of UNHCR. Follow us as we provide vital aid and protection to the forcibly displaced around the world.

We The Peoples

Voices from around the United Nations, with updates on digital diplomacy, peace, security, human rights and sustainable development.

UN Refugee Agency

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The official account of UNHCR. Follow us as we provide vital aid and protection to the forcibly displaced around the world.

We The Peoples

Voices from around the United Nations, with updates on digital diplomacy, peace, security, human rights and sustainable development.

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