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Home Europe

U.K. moves for power to cancel citizenship without notice, by Stanley Ugagbe

Nigerian Canadian Newspaper Canada by Nigerian Canadian Newspaper Canada
November 25, 2021
in Europe, World News
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A legislation being debated at the United Kingdom Parliament could allow Britain’s Conservative government to strip people of citizenship without giving them notice to appeal if it becomes law.

Local reports have it that the Nationality and Border Bill would permit the home secretary, Britain’s top domestic security official, to cancel citizenship without warning on national security grounds if it is not “reasonably practicable” to do.

This development is coming months after a top British court said that Shamima Begum, the British-born “ISIS bride” who left the country as a teenager to join the Islamic State, will not be allowed to return to the United Kingdom to fight a legal case about the revocation of citizenship.

In a statement obtained by newsmen, the Home Office said “Deprivation of citizenship on conducive grounds is rightly reserved for those who pose a threat to the UK or whose conduct involves very high harm,” adding that British citizenship is a “privilege” and not a right.

London reportedly clarified that the bill does not give it extra powers to remove citizenship, but legal experts have slammed the legislation for potentially creating situations where people lose their right to return home without being allowed to challenge the decision in court.

Reacting to the development, Alexander Gillespie, an international law expert at New Zealand’s University of Waikato said “It’s not the kind of transparency in due process that you want”.

“You want these things to be dealt with so that the person has a chance to answer the charges against them.”

It should be noted that while international law provides rights to citizenship, governments can retract it — usually after someone has been convicted of or confessed to a serious offense such as terrorism — as long as the person has a second citizenship “to fall back onto,” said Gillespie.

Records have it that such punitive measures have been in the news in recent years, after several Western governments canceled the citizenship of people who had allegedly joined Islamist terrorist groups in the wake of the Arab Spring. Some of these people had complex citizenship situations or multiple passports, leaving countries in disagreement over who should take responsibility.

In the Begum case, the British government argued that revoking her British citizenship would not render her stateless as she could obtain citizenship in Bangladesh, where she has family roots. Meanwhile, Begum has not been to Bangladesh, and the South Asian country has refused to let her in.

It was gathered that this summer, New Zealand reluctantly took in a 26-year-old woman identified as Suhayra Aden. Reports said Aden, who grew up in Australia and New Zealand, allegedly joined the Islamic State as a teenage bride and later had her Australian passport canceled. Canberra’s decision sparked a diplomatic row with Wellington.

Harping on Aden who had been detained in Turkey, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said “New Zealand has not taken this step lightly. They are not Turkey’s responsibility, and with Australia refusing to accept the family, that makes them ours.”

It would be recalled that in a similar case in 2019, the Trump administration barred Hoda Muthana, a New Jersey-born woman who left the country to marry an ISIS fighter, from returning to the United States. The United States and Muthana were at odds as to whether she was ever a citizen, with the government arguing that her father was an accredited Yemeni diplomat when she was born.

Meanwhile, Muthana’s lawyer released a document that stated her father was no longer a representative of the Yemeni government at the time of her birth.

Analysts are of the view that the issue becomes particularly complex if the people who have their citizenship revoked have young children born elsewhere, who may also lose their right to live in the West.

Gillespie said if governments “actually want to fight radicalization, the best thing to do is bring these people home and de-radicalize them, rather than putting them back to the wind where they will be more angry”.

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