A
member of the Federal House of Representatives (Jigawa) and Chairman, House of
Representatives Committee on Internally Displaced Persons, Sani Zorro
|
Sani Zorro, Chairman,
House of Representatives Committee on Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), says
the Nigerian government plans to issue United Nations passport to people at
risk of being stateless.
Mr.
Zorro made this known during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria
(NAN), on Saturday, in Abuja, marking the second anniversary of Nigeria ratifying
the Abidjan Declaration to end statelessness.
He
said that the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and IDPs and the
National Immigration Department are engaged in a process called refugee status
determination.
He
explained that this process would help to ascertain stateless persons that are
eligible for the UN passport, a document they can hold on to before their
respective cases are resolved.
Mr.
Zorro noted that it is important for Nigeria to speedily domesticate and
implement the Abidjan Declaration on statelessness as it contains the
strategies and recommendations of dealing with statelessness.
He
pointed out that there was a looming stateless situation in Nigeria which could
arise from the high level of displacement in the North-east.
“As
a result of the North East Crises, quite a number of refugees who find
themselves in neighbouring countries of Chad, Niger and Cameroon may not be
able to return to Nigeria again.
“The
longer they live and reproduce in those countries, they would face the risk of
statelessness because in future when the host countries ask of their
nationality, they would not be able to show evidence.
“The other situation could be as a result of the
over 800 Turkish nationals living and running different businesses in Nigeria
whose nationalities were recently nullified by their country’s President.
“Another
situation is of some Nigerians who fled from the Central Africa Republic (CAR)
to Nigeria three years ago during the political crises and settled in Kano,
Jigawa and other North-western states.
“These
groups of persons are currently stateless because as a result of loss of
documents. The younger ones who were born in CAR do not have any papers to
prove themselves as Nigerians,” he said.
The
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that on Feb. 25, 2014, the UN High
Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and the Economic Community of West African
States (ECOWAS) organized a Regional Ministerial Conference on ending
statelessness.
At
the end of the conference which held in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, participants who
represented 15 countries in the sub region ratified the document also known as
the “Abidjan Declaration’’.
The
declaration contains steps and recommendations to be adopted by member countries
to ending statelessness in West Africa.
The conference was organized to show West Africa’s commitment to the UNHCR’s ten-year global campaign which was launched on Nov. 4, 2014, to eradicating statelessness by 2024.
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