News / National
Confusion on Zimbabwe dual citizenship continues 1 year after ConCourt ruling
16 Apr 2015 at 15:43hrs | Views
Confusion surrounding the issue of dual citizenship continues, with the Zimbabwean government website showing that dual nationality is still prohibited, almost a year after the Constitutional Court ruled otherwise.
According to the Home Affairs website the 1984 Citizenship Act which says 'no adult citizen shall be a citizen of another country' is still binding. This is also despite the fact it is more than a year since the country adopted a new Constitution which experts say permits dual nationality.
The new Constitution entitles citizens of Zimbabwe by birth to take citizenship of other nations of their choice but the Registrar General's office is adamant this right does not exist.
Optimism ran high following the adoption of the new Constitution but was dampened by repeated indications that the Registrar General's office still considers dual nationality as illegal. Optimism was revived when the ConCourt endorsed a Zimbabwean's entitlement to dual nationality and ordered the office of the Registrar General to comply with the ruling.
In granting Farai Daniel Madzimbamuto his wish, the ConCourt ordered the Director of Immigration to endorse his South African passport with an unrestricted and indefinite residence permit. Experts welcomed the ruling saying it 'merely confirmed' what was already provided for in the Constitution.
But as the government insists on the old law, there are concerns that the right to dual citizenship will only be endorsed by the courts on an individual basis.
The delay in harmonizing the laws with the new Constitution stood to perpetuate the confusion on dual citizenship.
Government is seen dillydallying in aligning all the laws with the new Constitution forcing individual citizens to seek recourse in the courts. The government resolve to perpetuate this state of affairs was demonstrated when the justice minister defiantly told parliament that as long as people did not approach the courts to scrap the old laws the government would continue to use them.
According to the Home Affairs website the 1984 Citizenship Act which says 'no adult citizen shall be a citizen of another country' is still binding. This is also despite the fact it is more than a year since the country adopted a new Constitution which experts say permits dual nationality.
The new Constitution entitles citizens of Zimbabwe by birth to take citizenship of other nations of their choice but the Registrar General's office is adamant this right does not exist.
Optimism ran high following the adoption of the new Constitution but was dampened by repeated indications that the Registrar General's office still considers dual nationality as illegal. Optimism was revived when the ConCourt endorsed a Zimbabwean's entitlement to dual nationality and ordered the office of the Registrar General to comply with the ruling.
But as the government insists on the old law, there are concerns that the right to dual citizenship will only be endorsed by the courts on an individual basis.
The delay in harmonizing the laws with the new Constitution stood to perpetuate the confusion on dual citizenship.
Government is seen dillydallying in aligning all the laws with the new Constitution forcing individual citizens to seek recourse in the courts. The government resolve to perpetuate this state of affairs was demonstrated when the justice minister defiantly told parliament that as long as people did not approach the courts to scrap the old laws the government would continue to use them.
Source - Byo24News