LONDON: Britain has agreed to look into the plight of more than 500 Malaysian British Overseas Citizens (BOCs) who have found themselves stateless in the country.
Source: mStar
- Immigration Minister Phil Woolas said he would meet with the ex-Malaysians in a predicament after they were misled into giving up their passports as a route towards acquiring British citizenship.
- He described the BOCs’ position as a “hangover” from Britain’s colonial past which the Government was willing to pursue.
- This is the first time the Malaysian BOCs have had the opportunity to press for a meeting with the minister following their peace rally in July to lobby for British citizenship.
- They had acquired BOC status by virtue of being born in the two former British colonies before 1983 following an amendment to the British Nationality Act, which created a residual BOC category.
- Earlier, in his written response to London Citizens, a grassroots organisation, Woolas said the UK Border Agency’s position on Malaysian citizenship was based on a recent decision by the Immigration Appeal Tribunal in a case involving Ting and others.
- According to reports made available to The Star, the tribunal had dismissed the applications of 122 BOCs, citing among the reasons, that they were not entitled to British citizenship.
- Woolas said it had been the agency’s understanding and the Malaysian Government’s position, that acquisition of a BOC passport by a Malaysian citizen was sufficient justification for the deprivation of Malaysian citizenship.
- However, he said the tribunal took the view in the case of Lim, Teh and Ting that the relevant articles of the Malaysian Constitution did not give reasons to conclude that a BOC lost Malaysian nationality by acquiring or using a BOC passport.
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