KUALA LUMPUR, March 6 — The Federal Court will jointly hear today five cases in which five stateless people born in Malaysia — to either Malaysian biological or adoptive parents — seek to know what is required for them to be declared as citizens.
Five not Malaysians, beyond their control
The government had refused to recognise these five as Malaysian citizens, due to circumstances such as their birth parents being unknown despite having adoptive Malaysian parents, or because some of them were born out of wedlock to a Malaysian father and non-Malaysian mother.
All five were children when their court cases to be recognised as citizens first began, but one of them has over the course of court hearings turned into an adult and will be 20 this year.
The Court of Appeal has said that it is not enough for those seeking citizenship to prove that they were born in Malaysia, and said they must also prove they are not already citizens of another country. — Bernama pic
The key issues that led to this Federal Court hearing
These cases revolve around the courts’ interpretation of the Federal Constitution, mainly Article 14(1)(b) which deals with the acquiring of citizenship by operation of law for those born after Malaysia was formed, and the related conditions under Part II of the Constitution’s Second Schedule.
The key constitutional provisions cited in these cases are Section 1(a) and Section 1(e) of Part II of the Second Schedule.
To be a citizen by operation of law, Section 1(a) requires a person born in Malaysia to have at least one "parent” who is either a Malaysian or permanent resident at the person’s time of birth, while Section 1(e) requires a person born in Malaysia to be "not born a citizen of any country”.
In the written judgments by the Court of Appeal in four of these five cases, the judges said these citizenship requirements involve both the concepts of "jus soli” — birth right citizenship or the right to citizenship according to birth place, and "jus sanguinis” — the determination of citizenship based on lineage where at least one parent is a citizen.
Complicating matters in these citizenship cases are illegitimate births or children not born in a valid registered marriage, especially when it involves a non-Malaysian mother. This is due to Section 17 of Part III of the Second Schedule saying that the "parent” of an illegitimate child will be considered to refer to the mother, with the Court of Appeal saying in Lim Zu Yi’s case that this meant he had taken on his biological mother’s Thai citizenship and not his biological Malaysian father’s citizenship.
A problem for adopted children is where no one knows the identity and citizenship status of their biological parents, which has caused the National Registration Department (NRD) to refuse registering these children as Malaysians even when they have been adopted by Malaysian parents.
The NRD told P's adoptive parents that he was not registered as citizen despite the formal adoption, as it had no data on his birth parents. — Picture by Choo Choy May
Seven legal questions
In the first two cases represented by lawyers Raymond Mah and Datuk Cyrus Das, 17-year-old boy P* and 16-year-old boy C* with unknown birth parents were both separately adopted by two Malaysian couples, but were not recognised as citizens.
P’s adoptive parents had registered themselves as the biological parents in his initial birth certificate. They were told to formally adopt him when applying for his MyKad when he turned 12, with the NRD then issuing a second birth certificate that said there was no information on his biological parents. After he was formally adopted, the NRD issued his third and current birth certificate which said he was not a citizen as it had no data on his birth parents.
P had succeeded in his citizenship bid at the High Court — which had cited previous court decisions where an adoption order effectively grants citizenship to an adopted child with untraceable birth parents, but this was set aside by the Court of Appeal.
As for C’s citizenship bid also handled by Mah, the High Court had decided to first refer constitutional questions to the Federal Court to decide on.
In the two cases that lawyer Raymond Mah is handling, the Federal Court is being asked to answer if the citizenship requirement of having a Malaysian ‘parent’ refers to the ‘lawful parents’ instead of birth parents. — Picture by Ida Lim
For these two cases, the Federal Court will hear and decide on seven questions of law, including whether a Malaysia-born child adopted by Malaysians would qualify for citizenship under either Section 1(a) or Section 1(e) of the Second Schedule’s Part II (having at least one Malaysian parent at birth time or not being born a citizen of other countries); and whether "parents” in Section 1(a) refers to a child’s "lawful parents” instead of biological parents.
The other questions include whether the post-adoption birth certificate — which typically names the adoptive parents as the child’s parents — will be conclusive evidence of the parents’ identity when deciding the child’s right to citizenship under Section 1(a), and whether the pre-adoption birth certificate — that has been surrendered for cancellation and replacement by the post-adoption birth certificate — can still be used by the Registrar-General of Births and Deaths Malaysia or the courts to determine who the parents are.
Citing Section 2(3) of the Second Schedule’s Part II, the lawyers also want the Federal Court to decide if a Malaysia-born child who did not become a citizen of any other country within one year of their birth date would become a Malaysian under Section 1(e); and whether the child had to prove both the parents’ identity and that they are Malaysians or whether it was enough for the child to show that he or she did not become a citizen of any other country within one year of their birth.
The seventh legal question for the Federal Court to answer is whether the Federal Constitution’s Article 15A is an "alternative relief” that will bar someone from going to the courts to seek citizenship recognition.
In dismissing P’s citizenship bid, the Court of Appeal had among other things said that he had not used up all other available methods, noting that he could still have applied for citizenship through Article 15A by asking the Home Minister to consider registering him.
Article 15A is on the federal government’s special powers to register anyone below the age of 21 as citizen.
Being a stateless person who is not a citizen of any country in the world means being deprived of benefits and rights enjoyed by Malaysians, such as going to public schools. — Reuters pic
One legal question
In the two other cases where Datuk Seri Gopal Sri Ram is expected to be the lead counsel, the 20-year-old T* was adopted by Malaysian parents but with the biological parents also unknown. The adoptive parents had registered themselves as his biological parents in the initial birth certificate and raised him as their own child for 12 years, but the NRD had cancelled T’s application for a MyKad due to doubts over his lineage and reissued a second birth certificate.
After a formal adoption process that included unsuccessful efforts to find T’s biological mother, the adoptive parents then applied in 2012 under the Federal Constitution’s Article 15A for their adoptive child to be recognised as a Malaysian, only to receive a rejection letter from the Home Ministry almost two years later.
The other case represented by Sri Ram involves an eight-year-old boy, Lim Zu Yi, who was born to a Malaysian father and Thai mother that were not legally married when he was born. Lim’s mother is said to have left when he was six months old and to have been uncontactable since then.
At the Court of Appeal last year, the same panel of three judges had applied similar reasoning when rejecting both T’s and Lim’s separate citizenship bids, saying it was not enough for the duo to have shown that they were born in Malaysia. The judges said they should have also shown proof that they were not citizens of other countries.
For T and Lim, the single question of law that was posed for the Federal Court to decide is "whether the principle of jus sanguinis or reference to blood or lineage is a requirement under Section 1(e) of Part II, Second Schedule of the Federal Constitution”.
In other words, it revolves around whether jus sanguinis — the legal principle where citizenship is reliant on lineage and determined by the parents’ citizenship — should be used to determine citizenship status for a person who is born in Malaysia and not born a citizen of any country.
When contacted, lawyer Latheefa Koya who is also on the legal team told Malay Mail that the Federal Court has fixed for these two citizenship cases to be heard together with the rest, saying that the questions may not necessarily be combined but that the issues raised may and will overlap.
Lawyer Ranee Sreedharan’s client is asking if it is sufficient for a person seeking citizenship to show that they had not become any other country’s citizen within one year of their birth. — Picture by Ida Lim
Three legal questions
For the fifth case involving a child born to a Malaysian father and Papua New Guinean mother who later became a married couple after her birth, lawyer Ranee Sreedharan will be representing the 13-year-old girl, M*, in the bid to secure her citizenship status at the country’s highest court.
Unlike the three previous cases (P, T, Lim) which are appeals against the Court of Appeal’s rejection of their citizenship bid, the Court of Appeal had ruled in favour of the 13-year-old girl’s citizenship bid, leading to the government’s appeal today.
Ranee will be arguing on three questions of law, with the third question sharing similarities with the seven legal questions, namely whether it was enough for a person to show that he or she did not become a citizen of any other country within one year of their birth.
Ranee’s two other questions are whether the Legitimacy Act’s Sections 3 and 4 which makes an illegitimate child legitimate from the date of the biological parents’ subsequent marriage can be read together with the Federal Constitution’s Second Schedule’s Part II Section 1 and Part III’s Section 17 to determine a person’s citizenship status; and whether the court may grant citizenship status under Section 1(a) to someone who was legitimised based on the biological parents’ marriage date.
What a life without citizenship means
The fathers of the 20-year-old T and the eight-year-old boy, Lim, are only too aware of the life of uncertainty and hardships that await their children if the Malaysian government refuses to recognise the latter as citizens.
The duo’s fathers had — in separate supporting affidavits or sworn statements to back their court cases — shared the same concerns over their children being rendered stateless with the denial of Malaysian citizenship.
"He will also not have valid status or be recognised by any government agencies or private agencies and be forced to leave without personal identification documents. This status of being stateless will continue on and give impact to future generations if he has children.
"The second appellant (my son) will also face problems when facing legal enforcement such as the police and Immigration despite not being a foreigner.
"Subsequently he will face difficulties in doing any registration or getting civil documents relating to birth, death, marriage, driving licence, business, passport and so on,” the two fathers had told the courts in their 2014 affidavits.
Lim’s father had also said that his child will be denied the rights and benefits for a Malaysian citizen such as studying at public schools, medical treatment in public hospitals and a legitimate job; while T’s father said he would be unable to sit for major examinations or further his studies abroad if he wishes to do so.
*The actual names were not used due to privacy reasons.
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