By Michael Clements | Acting National Director
As the new year begins, Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR) has renewed its commitment to fighting the phenomenon of stateless children within the borders of South Africa. Statelessness has been described as one of the most forgotten human rights crisis -affecting millions globally, resulting directly in exclusion and marginalisation in almost all aspects of life for such affected persons.
For children, in particular, the consequences of being "a national nowhere and a foreigner everywhere" are severe: they are denied access to education, to health care, and to social assistance on the basis that they lack proper identity documents. Stateless children are denied these basic rights - and robbed of their dreams - as they are forced to exist on the fringes of society, invisible and forgotten.
LHR worked to combat this reality for its young clients over the reporting period by continuing to assist undocumented and stateless children through its walk-in clinics across the country, ensuring access to birth registration, citizenship and legal status in South Africa. Despite the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the need to conduct most of these consultations remotely, the organisation continues to believe this work is critical, because the plight of our young, stateless clients is so real.
As just one example, our client Elizabeth was born in Lesotho to a Basotho mother and a South African father. She moved to South Africa when she was a small child. South Africa is her home and where she has started a family of her own. Elizabeth has been fighting for recognition as a South African citizen for her whole adult life. She has never been issued with a birth certificate or an ID document and, as a result, has never had a formal job. Because Elizabeth continues to battle for recognition and belonging, she cannot register her son, Neo’s, birth. Elizabeth’s status in South Africa has resulted in marginalisation and exclusion for both her and her family. Neo, who is 10, dreams of becoming a policeman. He is a naturally gifted runner and loves to race. Elizabeth, reflecting on how their lack of documentation effects Neo’s life says, “he loves to run but he is never allowed to compete because he does not have a birth certificate”.
As part of LHR's work on behalf of Elizabeth, Neo, and many others like them, LHR provided direct legal support over the reporting period, but also helped lead the UNHCR #IBELONG campaign, which has the goal of eradicating statelessness globally by 2024. November 2020 marked the sixth anniversary of the campaign, and LHR called on the South African government to help ensure that no one, including our children, has to suffer the indignities of not belonging. In the words of South Africa's highest court, in a judgement on one of LHR's most significant statelessness cases in 2020, nationality is more than a legal status - "it goes to the core of a person's identity, their sense of belonging in a community." (Chisuse v Director-General of Home Affairs (CCT 155/19, 22 July 2020).
LHR looks forward in 2021 to continuing its impactful work on this issue, and in aiding many more children realise their legal rights to belonging.
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