“Without a nationality, stateless children can be denied access to basic
social protection programmes, cannot earn education certificates or graduate,
or obtain an identity card or a passport,” said UNICEF in a statement on
Wednesday.
“Without these basic protections and opportunities, these children are
more vulnerable to exploitation and abuse,” it added.
UNICEF said the decision contradicts numerous court decisions and
treaties to which the Dominican
Republic is party, and contravenes basic
principles of human rights.
“A 2005 judgment by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights on the
issue of nationality in the Dominican
Republic and the recommendations made by the
UN Treaty-based bodies and the Human Rights Council clearly set out that cases
involving the violations of children’s rights are particularly serious.
The Dominican
Republic is a state party to the UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child (2001), which clearly articulates that in
all state actions concerning children, the best interest of the child must be
the primary consideration,” it said.
UNICEF noted that, in 2008, in the concluding observations for the
Dominican Republic, the Committee on the Rights of the Child said that the
constitutional right of acquiring nationality by jus solis (the right to a
nationality or citizenship given because one is born in the territory of the
state in question) was “frequently denied to children who did not have regular
birth certificates or were born to parents whose residency had not been
regularized in the Dominican Republic.”
The Committee expressed serious concern at the large numbers of
stateless children generated by this policy.
“The provisions of the new ruling could place these children at risk of
deportation, in violation of the principles articulated in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, particularly articles 12 and 15,” UNICEF said.
It, therefore, urges the Dominican Government to adopt, with the support
of the United Nations system, a procedure to protect every child’s right to
acquire a nationality, in accordance with the country’s international human
rights obligations.
“UNICEF stands ready to support the Dominican Republic authorities with
the identification and implementation of procedures that would fully respect
children’s rights,” the statement said.
Last week, the Constitutional
Court in Santo
Domingo , ruled in favour of stripping citizenship from
children of Haitian migrants.
The decision applies to those born after 1929 — a category that
overwhelmingly includes descendants of Haitians brought in to work on farms.
The development, according to international observers, could cause a
human rights crisis, while leaving tens of thousands of people stateless and
facing mass deportation and discrimination.
Former Jamaica Prime Minister PJ Patterson has urged the 15-member
Caribbean Community (CARICOM) grouping to “strongly condemn recent developments
in the Dominican Republic
that could render stateless, thousands of persons of Haitian descent.
“No one can be hood-winked as to the reason and the purpose for this
kind of discriminatory legislation. Within the region we have an obligation to
speak and we cannot allow such inequities to go without our strongest
condemnations,” Patterson told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC).
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