Arab Times

Lebanon citizenshi­p law strips women of ‘identity’

‘Feels like second class citizen’

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BEIRUT, May 27, (RTRS): When her teenage daughter — a talented football player — was selected for a national Lebanese team, Nadine Moussa could not have been more proud.

But the celebratio­ns were short-lived.

Under a 91-year-old law, women like Moussa, who are married to foreigners, cannot pass their Lebanese nationalit­y on to their husbands or children — nor can they inherit or own property.

“She was selected and then told she was not allowed on the team because she is not Lebanese,” Moussa said. “She was devastated she stopped playing football after that, she felt rejected and excluded.”

Her two daughters, who have always lived in Lebanon, cannot access public health or education and when they are old enough, they cannot work without a permit, according to the law.

Nor can Moussa pass on the family property or land due to strict limits in Lebanon on the amount of property those who are classed as foreigners, such as her daughters, can own.

“I have always felt like a second-class citizen, being deprived of the right to give my nationalit­y to my children and my family, said Moussa, a lawyer, long-time activist and Lebanon’s first female presidenti­al candidate.

The law affects more than 77,000 people, a 2009 study, Predicamen­t of Lebanese Women Married to NonLebanes­e, found.

The issue is even more complicate­d for Lebanese women married to Palestinia­n men, because Palestinia­ns are denied the right to own any property in Lebanon.

Reform

It is 14 years since the campaign to reform nationalit­y laws across the Middle East was launched.

Since then, most Arab countries, including Saudi Arabia, have either partially or completely reformed their nationalit­y laws, the executive director of the Collective for Research and Training on Developmen­t Action, Lina Abou Habib, said.

“Although Lebanon boasts of being way more liberal than other Arab countries, it has not yet done any reform in this area,” Abou Habib told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The country’s mostly male politician­s offer a standard set of arguments against allowing women to pass on their nationalit­y to their foreign husbands and children, she said.

“They say if you reform the law then all Palestinia­n men will marry Lebanese women and they will never return to Palestine, thereby taking away the right of Palestinia­n refugees to return home,” Abou Habib said.

The United Nations estimates there are 450,000 Palestinia­n refugees registered in Lebanon.

They have limited rights, cannot own property and are prevented from working in 20 nominated profession­s, according to the United Nations.

Opponents argue that Lebanon maintains a delicate religious balance between Christians, Sunnis, Shi’ite and Druze. They say if women were to gain nationalit­y rights, it would mean Muslims would further outnumber Christians, threatenin­g the existence of Christians in Lebanon.

Crisis

And with the Syrian crisis now entering its sixth year and Syrian refugees making up one-quarter of Lebanon’s population, some also argue if women have the right to nationalit­y, Syrian men will marry Lebanese women and never return to Syria.

Abou Habib, and all activists interviewe­d for this story, reject these arguments as racist and say they are exploiting sectarian fears in order to deny women their rights.

“There is no link between women’s nationalit­y and the issue of Palestine or the country’s religious make-up or the Syrian crisis,” she said.

“At the end of the day, what is true is that the state does not recognise women as citizens.”

Not all political parties and coalitions share the same view on women’s nationalit­y — it is split between the Christian parties who oppose it and the Muslim parties who support it, Abou Habib said.

Complicati­ng the campaign is the fact that Lebanon has been without a president since May 25, 2014, essentiall­y paralysing its parliament and reducing the chance of political reform.

“The issue doesn’t disappear if there is no president or because we have the added complicati­on of the Syrian displaceme­nt,” Abou Habib said. “The issue is still there, women are still suffering.”

Property transfer is not only governed by state laws, but by religious laws as well. There are 18 recognised confession­s or religions in Lebanon and laws prevent the transfer of property between confession­s.

Abou Habib offers her experience as an example.

Although she is an avowed secularist, her father’s Greek Orthodox religion is listed on her identity card. She is married to a Sunni man, so via the patrilinea­l rules associated with religious identity in Lebanon, their daughter is also Sunni.

“She cannot even inherit my car because she is a different confession,” Abou Habib said.

“You have the combinatio­n of the property law which is already discrimina­tory and religious family laws which are a disaster in their own right.” The law issued under the French Mandate of Lebanon in 1925 states that a person is considered Lebanese if born to a Lebanese father.

Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, who leads Christian party, The Free Patriotic Movement, has voiced some of the loudest opposition to the reform of Lebanon’s nationalit­y laws.

 ??  ?? Palestinia­n men play backgammon in Gaza City on May 26. (AFP)
Palestinia­n men play backgammon in Gaza City on May 26. (AFP)
 ??  ?? Bassil
Bassil

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