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Zim
citizenship rules in chaos as nationals denied documentation
Alex Bell, SW Radio Africa
October 22, 2013
View this article
aon the SW Radio Africa website
Scores of Zimbabweans,
whose citizenship is meant to be recognised and guaranteed by the
new constitution, have been denied documentation in recent weeks,
with a lack of clarity on the laws causing chaos.
It was hoped
that with the creation and gazetting of a new constitution,
the confusion over who is entitled to citizenship would finally
be clarified.
According to
that new charter there are three types of recognised citizenship
including citizenship by birth and by descent. The law states that
if you were born in Zimbabwe and your mother or your father was
a Zimbabwean citizen, you are a citizen by birth. The same applies
if you were born in Zimbabwe and neither of your parents was a Zimbabwean
citizen, but any of your grandparents was a citizen by birth or
descent.
You’re
also considered a citizen by birth if you were born outside Zimbabwe
but either your mother or your father was a Zimbabwe citizen who
normally lived in Zimbabwe or was working for the Government or
an international organisation. If not, and your parent or grandparent
was a Zimbabwe citizen by birth or descent, then you are a citizen
by descent.
But despite
these clear laws, people are still being turned away if neither
of their parents are Zimbabwean citizens.
This includes
the daughter of Simon Spooner, the former MDC security adviser and
campaign manager for Senator David Coltart. Spooner‘s daughter
Kylie, has been unable to secure a new passport, despite being a
citizen by birth and a former passport holder. Her mother is a Zimbabwean
citizen by birth, while her father was born in Kenya, but also holds
Zimbabwean citizenship.
Spooner told
SW Radio Africa that his daughter was assured by Registrar authorities
in Harare that she could apply for passport renewal, despite suggestions
that this would not be possible “because the statutory instrument
governing the new status for citizenship had not been gazetted.”
The provincial registrar in Bulawayo also supported the position
stated in Harare, saying only that she need a certificate of citizenship
to secure her new passport.
However, last
week when she went to the citizenship office for this certificate,
she and a number of other Zimbabweans seeking documentation were
turned away by an official.
“The officer
there simply said there is no statutory instrument and therefore
the constitution is not binding. Further to that he indicated that
anybody of that status could not apply for passports, that the whole
matter had been frozen since June, So that effectively denies hundreds
of thousands of Zimbabweans, if not more, access to travel documents,”
Spooner explained.
Spooner’s
daughter was also told that because she obtained citizenship as
a minor, “it no longer applies as you are now over 18.”
“What
once senses is a deliberate obstruction and the manner in which
people are being treated in this regard is very unpleasant,”
Spooner said.
Calling it a
“denial of people’s rights,” Spooner is now preparing
to take the matter to court, saying: “Legal precedent is critical
and a judgment needs to be delivered in a case like this.”
Andrew Makoni,
the Chairperson of the Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) said the constitution is clear,
and by now, citizens recognised according to the charter should
be allowed access to their documents. He explained that a clear
precedent was set by South African based businessman Mutumwa Mawere,
who secured his Zimbabwean citizenship and documentation after a
court challenge.
“Mutumwa
Mawere went to the Constitutional Court to assert
his right as a citizen of Zimbabwe by birth, notwithstanding his
citizenship in South Africa by naturalisation,” Makoni explained,
saying that this clearly asserted the authority of the constitutional
rules.
He meanwhile
said that argument given to the Spooners about a lack of a ‘statutory
instrument’ is a “lame excuse.” He said the only
challenge is a failure by Parliament
to enact a Citizenship and Immigration Board, which according to
the constitution, should be set up to deal with citizenship issues.
“The board
is not yet constituted, so that is a challenge… but the courts
are there to ensure that those people being denied the rights to
citizenship and to their documents can approach the courts for relief,”
Makoni said.
Efforts to get
comment from the office of the Registrar General were fruitless
on Tuesday.
SW Radio
Africa is Zimbabwe's Independent Voice and broadcasts on Short Wave
4880 KHz in the 60m band.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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