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Citizenship issues
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Court
deals blow to Mugabe's citizenship law
IOL
May 07, 2002
Harare - Zimbabwe's
government conceded on Tuesday in a high court that it cannot strip
rights activist Judith Todd of her Zimbabwean citizenship, even
if she could qualify for a passport from another country.
"I
concede the heads of argument presented by the applicant, so I have
no further submissions to make," Nelson Mutsonziwa from the attorney-general's
office told the court.
Zimbabwe's government
had refused to renew Todd's passport, saying that she was a citizen
of New Zealand because her parents were born there.
Government
argued that a 1943 New Zealand law gave citizenship to anyone whose
parents were born in that country.
Todd's lawyer,
Bryant Elliot, said Zimbabwean law required an expert from New Zealand
be present in court, if that nation's laws were to be considered.
He also argued
that Zimbabwean law automatically gives citizenship to anyone born
here.
Judge Sandra Mungwira is expected to hand down her judgment on Wednesday.
Both Todd's
parents were born in New Zealand, but she was born in Zimbabwe,
when it was the British colony of Rhodesia. Her father, Garfield
Todd, is a former prime minister of Rhodesia.
She has never sought a New Zealand passport.
Judith Todd
is an activist who supported Zimbabwe's liberation struggle but
who now opposes President Robert Mugabe, accusing his government
of widespread human rights abuses.
Todd's case
could have wide-ranging implications for all Zimbabweans of foreign
descent.
In March last year a law was passed that required anyone wishing
to retain Zimbabwean citizenship to renounce any right to foreign
citizenship – even if they had never held a foreign passport.
A high court
judge had ruled in February that people cannot give up a right,
but only a citizenship they actually hold.
The law targeted the estimated 30 000 white Zimbabweans who were
entitled to a foreign passport and tens of thousands of blacks whose
parents or grandparents had immigrated from neighbouring nations.
Government
critics had feared the law would bar people with foreign-sounding
surnames as well as the small white minority from voting because
they had not renounced their entitlement to foreign citizenship.
The legislation
was viewed as part of a wide-ranging strategy to ensure Mugabe's
re-election in the elections. - Sapa-AFP
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