APRIL 20 — Dear Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim,
When it was announced in February 2023 that the Cabinet had agreed to amend the Federal Constitution to enable children born abroad to Malaysian mothers to gain Malaysian citizenship by operation of law, there was a cry of elation and of tremendous relief within our network of affected mothers.
This amendment, when it comes to pass, will change the lives and fates of Malaysian women and their non-citizen children, and ensure that no one else will have to bear the brunt of this unequal law which has caused painful separations, deep uncertainty, and harm in situations of domestic abuse or marital separation.
However, this sense of hope was dampened when the tabling of the amendment in Parliament was delayed until September, to give time for a six-month study by the Committee on citizenship. We concur that issues of national importance require careful consideration, but this gender-unequal citizenship issue is a long-standing one, and one that has been raised and persistently made known to relevant government agencies from as early as 2018.
These delays directly impact us. With each passing day Danial, an impacted child who is now an adult, becomes one day closer to having to leave the country; Siti (real name withheld for privacy) spends one more day trapped in marital violence; Shahana, who has special needs, is pushed further away from the healthcare she urgently needs; Omar, a stateless child, continues to languish without the fundamental rights that come with legal status.
Ours is not a cry of impatience, but a cry of desperation.
Recently, the Home Ministry announced their target to process 10,000 citizenship applications this year. We welcome this move as the majority of us have applied for citizenship for our children under Article 15(2). However, the outcomes we have seen have only underscored how highly insufficient this route is due to its discretionary nature, lengthy waiting times, and lack of transparency. There are at least three mothers who discovered in April 2023 that their applications were rejected three years ago. During those three years they had made status checks with MOHA and JPN and were told their cases were ‘still in process’.
In the case of rejections, no reasons are ever given. The lack of any explanation leaves mothers in the dark over why they have been denied. The mothers mentioned above have waited for a very long eight years. Many of us have waited even longer than that. And many of us are still waiting.
We would also like to make reference to the Home Minister’s recent statement, which said that citizenship applications are rejected when applicants have never lived in Malaysia. While we are unsure if this is a criterion when considering Article 15(2) applications for Malaysian mothers and their children born outside Malaysia, we would like to highlight that rejection based on the criteria of never having lived in Malaysia is unfair.
There are complex and varied reasons why Malaysian women may be living overseas with their non-citizen children. Some are overseas for employment, and some have relocated as their non-citizen spouses are unable to obtain employment in Malaysia on a Long Term Social Visit Pass due to restrictions. There are also those who are forced to remain abroad, or are unable to return home to Malaysia due to the lack of protection and access to fundamental matters for their children, including healthcare, education, and other basic services which will have long-lasting consequences on their lives.
There are also mothers who have moved back to Malaysia to put down roots and raise their families, who have also received rejections after waiting for many years. We face many obstacles and bureaucratic issues in raising our non-citizen children in this country, which have caused unnecessary burdens and strains.
It is essential to remember that behind every application is a child whose future and well-being depend on a Malaysian citizenship. We are more than just a pile of documents on the Ministry’s desk, and we are more than just numbers to achieve in a KPI. Behind every application is a child whose life is on hold.
The mothers in our network would be most grateful for an opportunity to meet with you and share our lived realities. This would be an opportunity to have your ear on the ground and for all involved to have a deeper understanding of the issue.
This government has the power, and the duty, to ensure protection and care of the well-being of its citizens — Malaysian women and their children. Granting Malaysian women equal citizenship rights for their overseas-born children is putting the concept of ‘Ihsan’ into action, which will in turn give true meaning to ‘Malaysia Madani’. Please do not delay and deny us any longer. Embrace our children into the fold as citizens and let them live wholly as Malaysians, because their mothers are Malaysians.
*This is the personal opinion of the writer(s) or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.
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