The rights of refugees must be protected

It may understandably restrict claims to land given its scarcity, and with a view to what would be most equitable for host communities.

Update: 2018-10-21 18:37 GMT
Although Pakistan is not a contracting party, we can still glean from this that the determinants of naturalisation in any given protracted situation are less legal than economic, social, cultural or racial.

Last week, Afghan ambassador to Pakistan Omar Zakhilwal weighed in on the Prime Minister’s proposal to naturalise Pakistan-born children of protracted Afghan refugees, by asserting Afghanistan’s desire to see them return. Thus far, the arguments behind the controversial proposal have received surprisingly little legal scrutiny. Crucially, the narrow focus on naturalisation ignores that the solutions being sought to refugees’ problems can as effectively be achieved under refugee status.

The Prime Minister firstly argued that “automatic” birthright citizenship, or jus soli, is a universal norm. This is a fallacy. International law does give every child the right to acquire “a” nationality (Article 7, Convention on the Rights of the Child; Article 24, ICCPR), but any particular state’s nationality is not a birthright unless its law states so. Pakistan is one of only 30-odd world states with an unconditional jus soli law. It was argued secondly that Pakistan’s citizenship laws entitle 60 to 74 per cent of its refugees to citizenship by birth. The remainder would analogously be entitled by long residence. Factually, mass naturalisation of this scale would be unprecedented in the history of protracted refugee situations.

It bears stressing here that the Afghans living in Pakistan, including those born here, are not stateless but are entitled to full Afghan citizenship under Article 9(2) of the Afghan Law on Citizenship.

From an international law standpoint, the commentaries to Article 34 (on naturalisation) of the Refugee Convention tell us that naturalisation is an “absolute” sovereign prerogative. Facilitating the naturalisation of a refugee, even in general cases, is a recommendation which states cannot be compelled to perform “even after a long wait”, particularly where large numbers are concerned. Indeed, at the time of its drafting, Italy placed a reservation because of its “overpopulation and unemployment”.

Although Pakistan is not a contracting party, we can still glean from this that the determinants of naturalisation in any given protracted situation are less legal than economic, social, cultural or racial. So, any suggestion of there being a legal obligation on states to naturalise the protracted refugee families they have generously hosted would be untenable. As wealthier states limit financial assistance and their own resettlement criteria and quotas in disregard of their international responsibility to share the burden of refugees, host states in the Global South are bearing nearly all the world’s protracted refugee populations — a staggering two-thirds (13.4 million) of all existing refugees.

In Pakistan, reservations that the representatives of host communities have fiercely expressed to any suggestion of naturalisation are expressions of their complex circumstances: concerns over space and resources, ethnic and demographic tensions and the environment. Entrenching these through naturalisation would be condescending to those in the thick of it.

Naturalisation, then, is neither legally nor pragmatically realisable in Pakistan. But that cannot justify denying either the de jure or de facto Afghan refugees the rights that they are entitled to whilst they are present here. Indeed, the Prime Minister’s third assertion, that giving them citizen status can solve their work or housing problems, overlooks entirely that, as refugees, even with their Afghan nationality, they are already entitled to dignified work and housing under human rights instruments and the Constitution.

Their precarious refugee status itself, however, has meant that the need to give these entitlements as fixed, enforceable “refugee rights” has been avoided entirely. Instead, they have informally, albeit generously, been given liberties in the areas of livelihood, housing, healthcare, education and movement. So, first, their refugee status must be stabilised. Then, the state must put in place a dedicated national refugee law clearly stating their rights and specifying the parameter of each right as well as the refugees’ obligations towards the state, such as respect for the law and general tax payment. It may understandably restrict claims to land given its scarcity, and with a view to what would be most equitable for host communities. The state should simultaneously push for refugee-specific international funding assistance to support these rights.

Finally, making these rights meaningful would require the sensitisation of institutions, services and society at large. The experience of Azerbaijani refugees in Armenia tells us that not even naturalisation can prevent governments and societies ostracising former refugees based on their origin if they are so inclined. At its most liberal, a non-citizenship refugee regime can give refugees all the same economic, social and civil rights (save political rights) as nationals, while they retain their existing nationality. This is the method Nigeria adopted with its Liberian and Sierra Leonean refugees. Any number of variations is possible, but whichever one is adopted, the state must ensure that refugees are respected as refugees.

By arrangement with Dawn

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