| Lebanese fear losing
citizenship after shura council ruling, Palestinian families may lose status Hoss decries decision, saying that removing
passports from some citizens would definitely cause great suffering
Adnan
El-Ghoul
Daily Star staff
Palestinians families who became Lebanese citizens in 1994
fear that efforts to revoke their acquired citizenship might succeed, but it is likely
that only a few will have their citizenship taken from them.
The fears are exaggerated because the ruling might result in the revocation of just
a few cases, according to Ghassan Abdullah, the executive coordinator of the
Palestinian Human Rights Organization (PHRO).
According to Farid al-Khazen, the chairman of the Political Studies Department at the
American University of Beirut: It is too late to do anything about the citizenship
decree. The Shura Council should not have waited nine years to produce this ruling.
Khazen argued that the ruling put the problem back in the hands of the authorities who had
caused it in the first place. The council had the chance to revoke the decree or
endorse it, but instead they assigned the Interior Ministry to re-examine the forgeries
made under its auspices.
Those critical of the 1994 Citizenship Decree hoped to get a more decisive ruling on the
issue.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, former Prime Minister Salim Hoss said that
revoking the citizenship of some citizens would definitely cause great suffering.
Moreover, we must be careful not to discriminate by concentrating on the files of those of
Palestinian origin.
Khazen said that the Interior Ministry should look into all files without exception.
Granting citizenship to Palestinians violates the Arab League decisions against
policies that ignore the refugees right of return to their country, Khazen
added. Moreover, collectively granting citizenship to groups is unconstitutional and
the ruling of the council should have been based on the Constitution, not on political
considerations.
He said that the ruling has put the problem back into the hands of politicians, who would
only make the same mistakes, trying to solve the problem in exactly the same way.
Hoss said in his statement that he was against granting citizenship to groups of people.
However, he said that thousands of families have adjusted their lives to their new
reality (Lebanese citizenship); new children were born as Lebanese, others served in the
army, voted in elections or got jobs that were previously unavailable to them.
We cannot deprive newborns of their citizenship without causing a human
tragedy.
Abdullah broadly agreed with Hoss on the issue, saying that we oppose granting
citizenship to Palestinians; however, we do not approve of punishing whole families
because the father committed a forgery.
If it can be proven that false documents were used to obtain citizenship illegally,
courts should try the forger and not his family. If they did, they would be violating
basic human rights and imposing a form of collective punishment, he added.
He said that those who collaborated in the act of forgery were also culpable. This meant
that the decision to revoke citizenship was unjust since the Interior Ministry granted
citizenship to those who presented false papers. The Interior Ministry is making
Palestinians pay for its own mistakes and for its corrupt personnel.
Interior Minister Elias Murr has yet to examine the files of those who falsified their
papers, but those who support stripping the citizenship from those who falsified papers
are likely to be disappointed, Khazen said.
However, he added, they could prevent thousands of individuals who missed the deadline
from submitting claims. |