More Than 750,000 People in West Africa Are ‘Invisible’
DAKAR, 15 July 2014 (IRIN)* - At least 750,000 people are stateless in West Africa, according to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), which is calling for governments to do more to give or restore the nationality of stateless individuals, and improve national laws to prevent statelessness.
Many in the region are both stateless and refugees, said Emmanuelle Mitte, senior protection officer on statelessness with UNHCR in Dakar, but 80 percent of West Africans are stateless within their own country, lacking proof of the criteria required to guarantee their nationality.*
Lack of birth registration is the first step to statelessness for many children: some 230 million under-fives globally have never been registered, according to UNICEF. West Africa suffers very low rates of birth registration: just 4 percent of infants are registered in Liberia; 16 percent in Chad, and 24 percent in Guinea-Bissau, making them among the world’s worst 10 performers.
“Birth registration is more than just a right. It’s how societies first recognize and acknowledge a child’s identity and existence,” said Geeta Rao Gupta, UNICEF deputy executive director in a late 2013 communique launching the report Every Child’s Birth Right: Inequities and trends in birth registration.
“Nationality is not just a document; it affects all of your rights as a citizen. Without a nationality you’re invisible, you don’t exist ”
Three Million Double Orphans, Stateless
A significant proportion of West Africa’s three million double orphans (children with no living parent) are stateless, as are almost all of the region’s street children, known as talibés.
“People never look at the talibé issue from the standpoint of statelessness. It’s the elephant in the room,” said Brahmbhatt.
Emergencies and Statelessness
Emergency-linked displacement causes stateless figures to spike. The Chadian government helped evacuate tens of thousands of Chadians from Central African Republic (CAR) into southern Chad where most are still living in temporary transit camps. But many arrived without papers to prove their identity and thus fear for their future.
Youths who attended secondary schools in CAR told IRIN they had no papers to register at secondary schools in Chad. Furthermore, many people living in transit camps are from Mali, Senegal, Nigeria, but have no papers.
“You can’t send them to a country where they will have no state,” said Mitte.
Citizens of Niger (Nigeriens) who fled Boko Haram attacks on their villages in Nigeria to return to Niger face a similar predicament as most arrived with no papers.
“People flee leaving their documents behind thinking they’ll soon return or that they’re safer left at home,” said Mitte.
The Niger government demands a birth certificate as an initial document to certify Nigerien citizenship but almost all returnees IRIN spoke to in Diffa, eastern Niger, said they had left them behind.
Dozens of interviewees said they fled quickly in the night as their houses were set on fire, and they fear their paperwork, alongside most of their possessions, has been burned or looted.
Taking Action
Statelessness usually occurs because people cannot provide the necessary documentation to prove their identity when state laws exist. But in some cases the laws are simply too weak to impose or do not sufficiently help protect citizens’ rights.
Governments must adjust their laws to fit with the Conventions they have signed, notably the 1954 Convention relating to the status of Stateless Persons, and the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness, said UNHCR.
The gap between signing up to and applying international norms remains too wide, say campaigners. A first step in reducing statelessness is to raise awareness that it exists, and of its impact.
People Do Not Know About Statelessness…
“People don’t know about statelessness or to fight for it, so they don’t ask for help,” said Mitte.
As such, UNHCR runs trainings on statelessness among legal experts, government officials, civil society groups and journalists to try to get the word out. Progress on documenting individuals in West Africa is slow partly because there is more leeway for people to live in invisibility in a region dominated by a largely informal economy.
In Europe stateless individuals would not last long before being imprisoned or deported, said one critic. But as West African economies and societies formalize legally and increase border restrictions linked to terrorism concerns, it will probably become more difficult to live without paperwork, said Mitte.
UNHCR advises governments on how to help individuals acquire identity documents and to include nationality issues in wider governance plans, among other activities.
Civil Society
Civil society groups play an important role in giving legal advice to individuals on how to obtain documentation but could do more, say campaigners. UNHCR urges NGOs to bring forward strategic legal cases.
Thus far just a few cases of statelessness have been brought up with national judicial bodies in Africa and only two cases have been examined by the African Commission, according to UNHCR.
None have yet been brought to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) court of justice. UNHCR works closely with other UN agencies and with NGOs to address statelessness holistically.
It works closely with UNICEF, given UNICEF’s long-term efforts to boost birth registration, which are starting to pay off, said child protection specialist in West and Central Africa Mirkka Tuulia Mattila.
In the region, Benin, Burkina Faso and Senegal have improved registration rates, introducing SMS registration systems and removing registration fees.
The key is to tie registration to all maternal and child health services, with registration as the grounding factor, she stressed. aj/cb
*Source: Report by IRIN, a humanitarian news and analysis, a service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Go to Original.
**Photo: Anna Jefferys/IRIN | Nigerien returnees fleeing violence in Nigeria face citizenship challenges
Filed under: Africa, Market Lords, Mother Earth, Others-USA-Europe-etc., The Peoples, War Lords
Source: http://human-wrongs-watch.net/2014/07/15/25986/
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