logo
UN Slams Kuwait for Revoking 37,000 Citizenships

UN Slams Kuwait for Revoking 37,000 Citizenships

The Sun3 days ago

DUBAI: The United Nations' human rights office voiced concern on Wednesday after tens of thousands of Kuwaitis were stripped of citizenship, many of them women.
More than 37,000 people, including at least 26,000 women, have lost Kuwaiti nationality since August, according to an AFP tally of official figures, although media reports suggest the real number could be much higher.
The mass revocations have been cast as part of a reformist agenda spearheaded by Kuwaiti emir Sheikh Meshal al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, in power since December 2023.
'We are deeply concerned about Kuwait's recent nationality revocations, particularly of individuals who renounced previous citizenships, and about the extension of such revocations to their dependents,' UN Human Rights Office spokesperson Seif Magango told AFP.
'Stripping people of their nationalities has a serious impact on their economic, social, cultural, and political rights.'
The new ruling applies to women who became Kuwaitis through marriage since 1987. Official data show 38,505 women were naturalised by marriage from 1993 to 2020.
It also targets people with dual nationality, which Kuwait does not allow and those who were naturalised for their achievements.
The campaign has left thousands of people in a legal grey area and scrambling to restore their previous nationality.
Kuwait has set up a committee to hear appeals, with more than 14,000 applying so far, according to the official Kuwait News Agency.
However, Magango said: 'Their inability to challenge these decisions in court also raises serious concerns.
'This risks further marginalisation and social exclusion in Kuwait.'
Anyone found to have obtained citizenship by forgery or fraud also loses their Kuwaiti nationality, along with their descendants.
'Retroactively revoking citizenship... and extending this to their descendants, raises serious human rights concerns,' Magango said.
The UN office has urged Kuwait to 'review the nationality law to ensure it complies with international human rights standards and consider sustainable solutions to prevent statelessness', he added.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

India arrests 81 for ‘sympathising' with Pakistan
India arrests 81 for ‘sympathising' with Pakistan

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

India arrests 81 for ‘sympathising' with Pakistan

GUWAHATI: Indian police have arrested scores of people for 'sympathising' with Pakistan, a month after the worst conflict between the arch-rivals for decades, a top government official said Sunday. The arrests took place in the northeastern state of Assam, where Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said '81 anti-nationals are now behind bars for sympathising with Pak'. Sarma, from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist ruling party, said in a statement 'our systems are constantly tracking anti-national posts on social media and taking actions'. One of the persons was arrested after he posted a Pakistani flag on his Instagram, Assam police told AFP. No further details about other arrests were given. There has been a wider clampdown on social media since an April 22 attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir, the deadliest on civilians in the contested Muslim-majority territory in decades. New Delhi blamed Islamabad for backing the Islamist militants it said carried out the attack, charges that Pakistan denied. India and Pakistan then fought a four-day conflict, their worst standoff since 1999, before a ceasefire was agreed on May 10. India's counter-terrorism agency last month arrested a paramilitary police officer for allegedly spying for Pakistan, while authorities have arrested at least 10 other people on espionage charges in May, according to local media. Sarma is also pushing efforts to stem the contentious issue of illegal immigration. Assam shares a long and porous border with neighbouring Muslim-majority Bangladesh. Indian media have reported that Assam's government has allegedly rounded up dozens of alleged Bangladeshis in the past month and taken them to the frontier to cross. The Times of India newspaper on Saturday reported that Assam was 'dumping them in no-man's land', suggesting that at least 49 had been pushed back between May 27-29 alone. The Assam government has not commented on the reports. Bangladesh, largely encircled by land by India, has seen relations with New Delhi turn icy, after the Dhaka government was toppled in an uprising last year. Bangladesh has also moved closer to China, as well as to Pakistan.

India arrests 81 people for 'sympathising' with Pakistan
India arrests 81 people for 'sympathising' with Pakistan

The Star

time2 hours ago

  • The Star

India arrests 81 people for 'sympathising' with Pakistan

People participate in Tiranga Yatra or tricolor march in Guwahati, India, to celebrate India's attack on targets inside Pakistan it said were affiliated with militants responsible for the massacre of 26 tourists in April in Indian-controlled Kashmir, Wednesday, May 14, 2025. -- AP Photo/Anupam Nath GUWAHATI India (AFP): Indian police have arrested scores of people for "sympathising" with Pakistan, a month after the worst conflict between the arch-rivals for decades, a top government official said Sunday. The arrests took place in the northeastern state of Assam, where Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said "81 anti-nationals are now behind bars for sympathising with Pak". Sarma, from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist ruling party, said in a statement "our systems are constantly tracking anti-national posts on social media and taking actions". One of the persons was arrested after he posted a Pakistani flag on his Instagram, Assam police told AFP. No further details about other arrests were given. There has been a wider clampdown on social media since an April 22 attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir, the deadliest on civilians in the contested Muslim-majority territory in decades. New Delhi blamed Islamabad for backing the Islamist militants it said carried out the attack, charges that Pakistan denied. India and Pakistan then fought a four-day conflict, their worst standoff since 1999, before a ceasefire was agreed on May 10. India's counter-terrorism agency last month arrested a paramilitary police officer for allegedly spying for Pakistan, while authorities have arrested at least 10 other people on espionage charges in May, according to local media. Sarma is also pushing efforts to stem the contentious issue of illegal immigration. Assam shares a long and porous border with neighbouring Muslim-majority Bangladesh. Indian media have reported that Assam's government has allegedly rounded up dozens of alleged Bangladeshis in the past month and taken them to the frontier to cross. The Times of India newspaper on Saturday reported that Assam was "dumping them in no-man's land", suggesting that at least 49 had been pushed back between May 27-29 alone. The Assam government has not commented on the reports. Bangladesh, largely encircled by land by India, has seen relations with New Delhi turn icy, after the Dhaka government was toppled in an uprising last year. Bangladesh has also moved closer to China, as well as to Pakistan. - AFP

More than 1,100 migrants crossed Channel on Saturday: UK govt data
More than 1,100 migrants crossed Channel on Saturday: UK govt data

The Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Sun

More than 1,100 migrants crossed Channel on Saturday: UK govt data

LONDON: Some 1,194 migrants arrived in the UK after crossing the Channel in small boats on Saturday, a record for this year according to AFP counting from government data. It brings the overall number of migrant crossings this year to 14,808, an unprecedented figure despite several measures in place by the French and UK governments to curb the crossings. French coastal authorities said they also rescued nearly 200 migrants between late Friday and late Saturday. The latest crossings, which UK Defence Secretary John Healey described as 'shocking', fall short of the all-time record of 1,300 migrants arriving on small boats in a day in September 2022. But they will still prove a headache for UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who has been at pains to toughen his rhetoric on irregular immigration amid pressure from the far right to slash migrant numbers. After a drop in 2023 from record levels in 2022 under a Conservative government, irregular crossings rebounded sharply last year, with 36,800 arrivals. This year, the number of people making perilous journeys crossed 10,000 in April, the earliest the milestone has been reached since records began in 2018, when the route into the UK first became popular. Starmer unveiled tough new immigration policies this month that include doubling the length of time before migrants can qualify for settlement in the country and new powers to deport foreign criminals. The raft of measures was widely seen as an attempt to win back support from voters and fend off threats from the increasingly popular hard-right Reform party. France has also agreed to allow its police patrols to intercept migrants in shallow waters, but they cannot stop a boat once it is on its way. 'We've got the agreement (with the French) that they will change the way they work,' Healey told Sky News on Sunday. 'Our concentration now is to push them to get that into operation.' Healey told the BBC: 'What we now need is to work more closely with the French to persuade them to put that into operation so they can intervene in the water, in the shallow waters, which they don't at the moment.' According to an AFP tally of official figures, 15 people have died so far this year trying to cross the Channel, one of the busiest areas in the world for shipping.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store