Monday, 8 July 2019

Africa and Diaspora-friendly Citizenship


Increased African populations are now in diaspora. They tend to retain connection with mother countries through home visits and financial remittances. Remittances and its economic impact seem to get political attention. But there is so much scope for more African countries to put in place Diaspora-friendly policies and strategies – a theme of this blog post.

If I can start close to home. The motivation to write this piece grew from observations of my own beloved country of origin, Tanzania, in its attempt to connect with its diaspora over the last decade. Authorities reach out supporting diaspora folk with passport renewals. Going by media reports, there are also efforts underway to enable eligible Tanzanian diaspora voters participate at future elections (see: http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-05/23/c_138083780.htm).

Researching the topic it quickly came up that Kenyan neighbours are well ahead in financial remittance inflows and their dual citizenship policies support reinforce inflows - that helps exercise the mind. Laugh-out-loud!

I thought, surely more that can be done by countries such as my motherland. First, there are growing numbers of African descendants born in diaspora who are left out. There are many mixed race folk where one parent is from Africa. There are 2nd and 3rd generation African descendants now living abroad.

Contemporary diaspora-friendly policies and strategies need to look beyond passport renewals.

I believe for countries like Tanzania, practical and strategic ideas can be identified and examined looking at what various countries around the world do. Each country has its own social, economic and political interest at heart. Africa is not alone in this; many countries around the world have grappled with diaspora interests before.

In a globalised integrated world each country thinks through and strategizes accordingly about ways it structures citizenship, and how it embeds diaspora considerations. There are many ways that each country manages to balance the benefits of flexible citizenship for diaspora population balanced with security interests.

I point out tangible examples from Africa itself, China, Australia, Italy and the EEU zone. For simplicity I highlight ideas in dot point.


Principles underlying Diaspora Citizenship

We are more familiar with ideas about national borders, and our rights to play part in economic, social and political life as citizens. We also have some awareness about rights and benefits that can be given to those who live amongst us such as permanent residents, temporary residents, skilled workforce/ expatriates, etc.

UNESCO’s description of citizenship is more helpful in enlightening any country wishing to pay serious regard to mutual interests involving their diaspora communities. To quote UNESCO:
Over the last decades, issues of citizenship have been seen…as the legal and political expression of nationality. A citizen has come to denote "a national with voting and passport rights". This has sometimes had the effect of reducing questions concerning citizenship to their legal minimum, i.e. matters of nationality. At the same time, migration and intermarriage undermine the traditional one-person/one state situation, so that many people are born with dual citizenship now. Though some states have suppressed the possibility of dual citizenship, citizenship laws in general are often being relaxed or disregarded.

There are two principles individually or in interaction as the basis for which countries grapple with how they structure diaspora citizenship rights. UNESCO defines these notions as:
·        jus sanguinis, the principle of blood, descent and heritage play a pivotal role in defining who is, and can become, a citizen. Where people were born is not as important as if and how they can trace their ancestry back to the origin country”
·        “jus solis, defines citizens as those born within the country, regardless of the citizenship of the parents”.

African Diaspora Citizenship - Advances

Already over half of African countries have adopted dual citizenship laws meaning their diaspora now largely “retain home country rights” (Whitaker, 2011). That is 30 countries out of 54 have taken account of globalising trends and ensured their citizenship structures leverages this.

Whitaker identifies measures implemented by various African governments:


The way individual countries balance concerns about diaspora rights on one hand and perceptions of security is interesting. Take Nigeria which has no problem allowing its dual nationals to hold public office, Ghana has spells out particular public roles to which dual citizens are excluded as illustrated below. All things considered, the rights enjoyed by the Ghanaian diaspora are still substantial.

Ghanaian Dual Citizenship - Extracts
The Citizenship Act (Act 591 of 2000) provides, among others, that, "A citizen of Ghana who acquires the citizenship of another country in addition to his Ghanaian citizenship shall notify in writing the acquisition of the additional citizenship to the Minister in such form and in such manner as may be prescribed."
Benefits
Dual citizenship policy is argued to create the following benefits.
·        It provides the individual the right to obtain passports from either country of citizenship.
·        It creates simpler procedure for individuals revisiting former homelands for extended periods of time.
·        It creates the opportunity to pursue employment opportunities in either country of nationality.
·        It improves the right to social benefits, to own land or property and to inherit assets from either country.
·        It creates the entitlement to convey nationality rights to offspring.
·        It caters for those who feel equal alliance to both countries of origin
Holders of dual citizenship cannot hold certain specified offices in Ghana, including the following:
·        Chief Justice and Justices of the Supreme Court
·        Ambassador/High Commissioner
·        Secretary to the Cabinet
·        Chief of Defence Staff
·        Inspector-General of Police
·        Commissioner of Customs, Excise and Preventive Service
·        Commissioner, Value Added Tax Service
·        Director of Immigration Service
·        Director-General, Prisons Service
·        Chief Fire Officer
·        Chief Director of a Ministry
·        Rank of Colonel in the Army or equivalent in other security services
·        Any other public office that the Minister may prescribe by Legislative Instrument

Remittances – Sneak Peek

Since I mentioned remittances earlier, here is a sneak peek of the diaspora financial inflows to Sub-Saharan Africa below. For the inflows-minded, the figures may also arouse your interest as we talk of diaspora-friendly policies and strategies later.
Remittances to Sub-Saharan Africa
Remittances to Sub-Saharan Africa accelerated 11.4% to $38 billion in 2017…The largest remittance recipients were Nigeria ($21.9 billion), Senegal ($2.2 billion), and Ghana ($2.2 billion). The region is host to several countries where remittances are a significant share of gross domestic product, including Liberia (27 per cent), The Gambia (21%), and Comoros (21%). In 2018, remittances to the region are expected to grow 7% to $41 billion.


Kenya & Tanzania Remittance Inflows

Kenya Annual Remittance Inflow

2017 - $ 1.811billion
2016 - $ 1.739billion
Remittances as % of GDP for 2017:  2.4%
Tanzania Annual Remittance Inflow
2017 - $ 433million
2016 - $ 411million
Remittances as % of GDP for 2017:  0.8%

It is my hope that the dot points I provide below are understood as both strategies that extend rights to diaspora populations, and also these ideas are also about running modern economies supported by flexible and skilled labour force in this globalised world. There are many positive lessons to draw from.

Kenya’s Dual Citizenship

  •  Kenya legally approved dual citizenship in 2011, a change enshrined in the new constitution
  • Kenya legally approved dual citizenship in 2011, a change enshrined in the new constitution
  • If one of your parents is Kenyan you are automatically regarded as Kenyan by birth even if born in another country
  • Kenyan dual citizens no longer require a visa when they enter Kenya regardless of the passport used for entry
  • Source: http://www.kenyaembassyspain.es/diaspora-citizen-registration/
  • Kenyan citizens are now also eligible to vote even if residing oversea
Source: https://www.awmagazine.org/the-letter-kenyans-in-diaspora-ignored-in-2012-addressing-current-dual-citizenship-concerns/


Australia

The Australian Government highlights the following about its citizenship:
  • “Many Australians are citizens of 2 or more countries”
  • Australia permits its citizens to hold an Australian passport and a passport of a foreign country where eligible
  • If your parent lost the Australian citizenship, as a person descended from a former Australian citizen, you can still acquire an Australian citizenship


It is also common knowledge that
  • Australian citizenship may improve chances of accessing government jobs.
  • Australian dual citizens when in need can access the social security system and public hospitals, Medicare-funded doctor services, pathology and imaging tests, and prescribed medicines under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme
  • Australia largely relies on selective skilled migration to maintain desired population levels (net growth from child birth is lower compared to net migration).


Also, note that:
  • New Zealand citizens are allowed to enter Australia “to visit, study, stay and work as long as you remain a New Zealand citizen” under a special visa classification 444 granted on arrival. The only restriction applies to those with serious criminal convictions or health issues such as untreated active TB.

  • New Zealand citizens are also eligible to apply for permanent residency which makes them eligible for some government benefits
  • Australia also facilitates a Pacific Labour Scheme allowing workers to enter Australia and take up low and semi-skilled jobs. This includes applicants from Fiji, Kiribati, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu. Income generated through this scheme is “life changing”. It enables workers to “pay for their kids’ education, start a small business or build a house”.

Sources:
Gleaning through the Australian model may give you an idea about ways that a country embeds flexibility about who it wishes to enter the country and participate in economic activities for the mutual benefit of all sides. Info below quoted verbatim from government source:


Working in Australia
If you want to come to Australia to work you will need a visa that suits the work you intend to do.
We have work visas for:
·        skilled workers
·        people participating in specific activities
·        working holiday makers
·        highly specialised workers
·        trainees, short term
·        experienced business people
·        investors
·        Australia's offshore oil and gas industry

If you need a sponsor to be eligible for the grant of a work visa you can find a sponsor yourself, or you can put in an expression of interest using SkillSelect.
More info on these sites:

China & the Chinese Diaspora

I googled these points from the South China Morning Post:
  • Foreigners of Chinese origin now are permitted to a visa that allows them “to stay in China for five years or enter the country multiple times over that period”
  • This five-year visa is permitted to Chinese citizens who hold foreign citizenship and their descendants.
  • Also, this five-year visa is permitted to those with one or two parents that are ethnically Chinese, or grandparents or ancestor who was once upon a time was a Chinese citizen in any past generations.
  • Before, ethnic Chinese outside China were only eligible for a “one-year multiple-entry visa”
  • For the Chinese authorities, this is one way of enabling the Chinese diaspora to  “participate in China’s economic development”

Source: Ethnic Chinese and want to live in China? Find out if you qualify for new five-year visa, South China Morning Post, 29 Jan, 2018. https://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/2131030/ethnic-chinese-and-want-live-china-find-out-if-you-qualify-new

Italian Citizenship

Italian citizenship is determined by “right of blood” (Jus sanguinis in Latin)
  • It means regardless where you were born whether in Italy or overseas, you have the right to Italian citizenship if one or both of your parents are citizens of Italy
  • Also in principle it recognises citizenship rights of people whose past ancestors descended from Italy. It embraces the “Right to Return” as per Universal Declaration of Human Rights. [For more info: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_of_return]
  • Italian citizenship By birth in Italy to stateless parents, to unknown parents, or to parents who cannot transmit their nationality to their children
  • Italian citizenship is automatically acquired through marriage to an Italian national
  • Analysts say in practice, not every ethnic Italian in diaspora exercise these rights to massive Italian descendants in diaspora whose numbers exceed people in Italy.
  • But here is a point of interest: the Italian diaspora citizenship right has enabled many ethnic Italians from Latin America to migrate to EU countries like Spain by virtue of their Italian ancestry.


EU Citizenship

In addition to country-specific citizenship rights, nationals of EU countries have a:
  • Choice to move around and live anywhere in the EU zone
  • Choice to work anywhere in the EU zone
  • “EU citizens are also free to trade and transport goods, services and capital through EU borders, as in a national market, with no restrictions on capital movements or fees” https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=LEGISSUM:l33152
  • Nationals of non-EU countries of Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and Liechtenstein (European Economic Area – EEA) have a “right of free movement and residence across the European Economic Area, as long as they are not an undue burden on the country of residence and have comprehensive health insurance…This right also extends to [their] close family members that are not EEA citizens
  • These EEA (non-EU) nationals become permanent residents after five years of living in the EU zone

Source:

Some Key Points

  • The idea of ‘right of blood’ allows a broader capture of diaspora populations such as descendants, etc.
  • A focus on who holds a currently renewed passport significantly limits understanding the numbers of African populations living in diaspora
  • Broadening the definition of who is defined as an African in diaspora is also likely to help increase remittance inflows and economic activity by diaspora populations because increased rights increases confidence in undertaking economic activity.  
  • Draw lessons from African countries such as Nigeria, Kenya, Rwanda, Senegal, Ghana that seem strategically positioned to attract greater diaspora financial remittances – that is, their citizenship frameworks align with remittance objective
  • Observe ways that many Western countries including Australia leverages labour migration  globally, regionally, and they structures citizenship rights and those of permanent and temporary persons alongside economic objectives
  • Observe the flexible labour movement (working people) between countries such as Australia and New Zealand
  • EU citizens are also free to trade and transport goods, services and capital through EU borders
  • Observe the flexible labour movement involving the EU and non-EU countries of Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, etc.
  • For the international development  minded, take a look at the Australia’s regional arrangements with Pacific nations and Timor-Leste allowing citizens of the Pacific Islands to work in Australia for up to three years supporting improve economic security
  • The revised Chinese approach is also instructive in that ethnic Chinese and descendants from foreign lands are enabled enter the country and stay for five years to pursue their economic interest as part of developing China.
  • The Ethiopian Origin ID Card valid for five years is also interesting in that it targets Ethiopians who have taken up foreign citizenship. Presumably the Ethiopian diaspora to pursue economic and social activities in Ethiopia without constraints
  • Central to most of those embracing either dual citizenship or some of diaspora rights, is the idea that the environment is created to ensure people move freely, pursue economic activities, deliver services and move capital
  • Recognise importance of future global networks and skills from 2nd and 3rd Generation descendants
  • Note that study and skilled migration is set to continue to produce children of mixed parentage.

It is my hope that these points are understood as both strategies that extend rights to diaspora populations, and also these ideas are connected to participating in modern economies in this globalised world. There is much that can be drawn upon, adapted or adopted.

Other relevant info link sites:

Readers may also be interested in looking at some of the news and scholarly sites below.
Tanzanians abroad send home Sh1 trillion yearly, The Citizen, April 18, 2018https://www.thecitizen.co.tz/News/Tanzanians-abroad-send-home-Sh1-trillion-yearly/1840340-4421572-enyv3e/index.html

Diaspora remittances outpace FDI, but costs remain a major hurdle, The East African, April 13, 2019. https://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/business/Diaspora-remittances-east-africa-outpace-FDI/2560-5070004-c30kfhz/index.html

Kenya Receives Highest Diaspora Remittances in EA, The Kenyan Wall Street, April 16, 2019. https://kenyanwallstreet.com/kenya-receives-highest-diaspora-remittances-in-ea/

Beth Elise Whitaker, The Politics of Home: Dual Citizenship and the African Diaspora. The International Migration Review. Vol. 45, No. 4 (Winter 2011), pp. 755-783






No comments:

Post a Comment