German Parliament adopts the new bill on the ‘option duty’

by EUDO Citizenship expert Anuscheh Farahat

On 3 July the German Bundestag (Federal Parliament) passed a bill reforming the so-called ‘option duty’ under German citizenship law. The Bundestag essentially adopted the bill as proposed by the Bundesregierung (Federal Government),  which was commented here earlier this year. The Bundestag now passed the bill without any significant changes. (*)

According to the new law the ‘option duty’ will be waived for children of immigrants born in Germany  who have either eight years of residence in Germany before turning twenty-one or have attended a German school for at least six years (while the residence requirement for the parents remain the same). The law will treat graduation from a German school and completion of professional education in Germany as sufficient. In cases when none of these criteria is satisfied, a ius soli ‘child’ may be able to prove a comparable close link to Germany, on the condition that the duty to opt would impose a particular hardship in the individual case. Accordingly, the citizenship administration will have to decide on a case by case basis whether the children are exempted from the ‘option duty’ and can keep both citizenships.

The new bill will improve the situation of the vast majority of ius soli ‘children’ in Germany. An estimated number of 40,000 young Germans per years will benefit from the new regulation as from 2018. However, the bill falls short of the historical move towards full acknowledgment of dual citizenship and retains the ‘option duty’ as a general principle. Moreover, the government has been criticised by NGOs and lawyers for creating new administrative hurdles and upholding the ‘option duty’ for purely symbolical reasons.

Read more details in Süddeutsche Zeitungn and in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 

(*) The Bundersat adopted the law without substantial modifications on 17 September 2014. Anuscheh Farahat is currently updating the report on CITIZENSHIP LAWS and Chronology of legislations for Germany. 

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The new powers of deprivation of citizenship in the UK

by Helena Wray

The Immigration Act 2014, which received the Royal Assent on 14 May 2014, permits the UK government to remove citizenship from British nationals in some cases where the result will be statelessness. The powers it contains are now part of UK law but will not be implemented until ordered by the Secretary of State.

The British Nationality Act 1981, S.40(2) already permits the Secretary of State to deprive a person of citizenship if she is satisfied that deprivation is conducive to the public good. Although this power was granted in 2006, it was rarely used until 2010 but, since that time, has been used at least 37 times, including against British citizens by birth. Deprivation orders are almost always served while the individual is outside the UK and take immediate effect so that the affected person cannot return to the UK to argue their appeal. Two people whose citizenship was removed in this way were later killed in US drone strikes while another was rendered to the US. An appeal, which is usually heard partly in secret by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission, was likely to succeed only on grounds that deprivation would make the individual stateless, a prohibition contained in s. 40(4) of the 1981 Act. In 2013, the UK’s Supreme Court ruled in Al-Jedda that deprivation could not take place if dual nationality did not exist at the moment  of deprivation even it were open to the person to apply for citizenship of another state and this would be granted.

Section 66 of the 2014 Act removes this protection from some groups of citizens. It inserts a new provision permitting the removal of citizenship acquired by naturalisation if the Secretary of State is satisfied that it would be conducive to the public good because the person has acted in a manner which is seriously prejudicial to the vital interests of the UK. The provision caused immense controversy when first proposed. It relies on a reservation to the 1961 UN Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness made by the UK government when it ratified the Convention and which was superseded in 2002 by changes to domestic law. The legality of reviving the reservation and the provision’s compatibility with norms of international law were questioned (see, for example, the opinion of the Open Society Justice Initiative and the opinion of Professor Guy Goodwin-Gill to the Joint Committee on Human Rights).

In the event, the severity of the new provision was mitigated in two ways. A deprivation order on these grounds may not be made unless there are reasonable grounds for believing that the person is able to acquire another nationality. The operation of the power must be reviewed periodically and a report sent to the Secretary of State and, subject to exclusions for public interest and national security reasons, laid before Parliament. These concessions were granted to obtain Parliamentary approval after the House of Lords had voted to replace the new deprivation power with a provision establishing a committee to investigate the necessity of such a power. Fresh legislation would have been needed later for it to be implemented.  Whether these amendments are sufficient to ensure that the Act meets domestic and international standards remains to be seen; much will depend upon the individual circumstances of those to whom it is applied and whether they (or any state which now has the ex-British citizen on their territory) can bring an effective challenge.

There are now several categories of British citizens whose status is more or less secure depending on their situation.
(1) Those who are British citizens by birth and do not have another nationality cannot have their citizenship removed.
(2) Those who are British citizens by birth or naturalisation and are dual nationals. They may have their citizenship removed if that is considered conducive to the public good.
(3) Those who obtained their citizenship by naturalisation who are not dual nationals so that deprivation will leave them stateless. Their British citizenship may be revoked if: 1. It was obtained by fraud, false representation, or concealment of a material fact; or 2. They are considered to have acted in a way which is seriously prejudicial to the vital interests of the UK and there are reasonable grounds for believing that the person is able to acquire another nationality.

Reportedly, 53 Britons were deprived of their citizenship since 2002.

 

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Swiss parliament adopts a major reform of its citizenship law

The Parliament of Switzerland now adopted a major overhaul of the federal citizenship law. The new law reduces the length of stay in the country from the current twelve years to ten and requires harmonisation of cantonal and municipal residence requirements. It also spells out in detail the criteria for integration and makes naturalisation conditional upon the availability of a permanent residence permit (which is itself granted earlier when the applicant is considered to be successfully integrated). The philosophy inspiring the reform is to give more weight to the integration criteria while lowering the formal barriers. 

Yet the minimal length of residence in the country remained one of the most controversial issues. There was a controversy between the two chambers and the party groups also about the minimum length of stay in the local community and in the canton, which today varies greatly from place to place. In Switzerland, unlike in any other European state, the power to naturalise immigrants lies with municipalities and cantons, which can add their own conditions to those specified in the federal citizenship law. This remains so, but the conditions are now harmonized.

 

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Italy plans to grant citizenship to the children of internationally protected refugees

The Italian Ministry of the Interior plans to introduce limited ius soli for the Italian-born children of persons who were granted asylum or subsidiary protection. Currently even if they have spent their entire life in Italy, such children receive the status of their parents, and must apply for citizenship after they reach 18. Italian nationality is generally transferred by ius sanguinis, so this would be a significant departure from this principle. However it will apply to a narrowly circumscribed category of cases, estimated to include no more than 200 persons. Further, the government does not intend to enshrine the change into law, but would rather issue an interpretative order expanding the scope of the existing provisions for children of unknown or stateless parents.

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Danish parliament votes to allow dual citizenship

After several years of consideration the Denmark changes its stance on dual citizenship and the parliament approved an amendment to allow it unconditionally. The justice minister Karen Hækkerup stated the reasons for this change of heart: “Many people today choose to settle in foreign countries, but still retain a strong attachment to their country of origin … We should not force them to choose.”

 

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Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act or Fostering a Citizenship of Fear?

Bill C-24 is an act pending in the Canadian Parliament that could bring significant amendments to Canada’s citizenship legislation. Although the reform intends to strengthen the Canadian Citizenship Act, Lorne Waldman and Audrey Macklin describe the resulting state of affairs as fostering a citizenship of fear. Others have said that the bill would create second class citizens (Patti Tamara Lenard), because if passed, it would allow the government to revoke the citizenship of naturalized Canadians should they commit certain crimes or fraud. The amendments will introduce a question in  the naturalisation process on whether the applicant intends to stay in Canada following naturalisation. In our globalised world, the proposed amendments to Canada’s citizenship legislation seem to weaken rather than strengthen Canadian citizenship.

 

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