Kuwaiti Government Strips Critics of 
		Citizenship Part of Broader Crackdown in Dissent
		 a HRW Statement 
		Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 27, 2014
		
		
		
		Kuwaiti authorities have announced the third batch of
		
		citizenship revocations during 2014 this year, during a general 
		crackdown on dissent, Human Rights Watch said today. The group of 18 
		revocations announced on September 29, 2014, which the authorities said 
		was based on a cabinet decision, included one that appeared politically 
		motivated. A total of 33 people have lost their citizenship during 2014, 
		of which three are thought to be for political reasons.
Kuwaiti 
		authorities should immediately stop stripping nationals of their 
		citizenship because they exercise
		
		free speech or other legitimate human rights, and reinstate the 
		citizenship of people whose citizenship has been withdrawn on those 
		grounds, Human Rights Watch said today. The authorities should also 
		amend the law concerning revocation of citizenship to ensure that the 
		grounds are narrowly defined, the decision to revoke will be 
		proportionate, and that those affected have the right to an independent 
		review.
“The Kuwaiti authorities seem to think they can use the 
		cover of the nationality law to target their critics and deter dissent,” 
		said
		
		Nadim Houry, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “But 
		Kuwait’s real message of official intimidation has rung out loud and 
		clear.”
Human Rights Watch interviewed activists, journalists, 
		and foreign diplomats, all of whom said the revocations were having a 
		chilling effect.
One described the practice as a “diabolical 
		scheme,” citing dramatic drops in
		
		online criticism of the government and in the numbers of protesters 
		at demonstrations, which she believed was linked to the first group of 
		revocations in July. “Last week there was a Gaza protest that normally 
		would amass thousands of people – only a few dozen showed up,” she said.
		
Kuwait’s Law of
		
		Nationality empowers the authorities to strip individuals and their 
		dependents of their Kuwaiti citizenship on several grounds, including if 
		it “involves the higher interests of the state or its foreign security,” 
		or the authorities consider that the individual has “promoted principles 
		that will undermine the social or economic system of the country.” 
		Revocation decisions are not subject to any judicial or administrative 
		appeals process.
However, courts have examined five citizenship 
		revocations since 2010, all involving people born to Kuwaiti fathers, 
		said al-Humaidi Bader al-Subaie, a lawyer who represents Ahmed Jabr al-Shammari, 
		50, whose citizenship the government revoked on July 21.
Al-Shammari 
		was one of five people whose citizenship was revoked on
		
		July 21, in the first batch of revocations this year, but only his 
		case was based on undermining the social or economic system. Al-Shammari 
		had owned the independent Al-Yom television station and Al-Yom newspaper. 
		In May and June, court orders at the behest of Kuwait’s information 
		minister temporarily closed both outlets after they defied a 
		prosecutor-ordered media blackout about an investigation into an alleged 
		plot by senior officials to overthrow the government.
The 
		withdrawal of Al-Shammari’s citizenship left him stateless, and his four 
		children also became stateless under provisions of the law. As a result, 
		he lost his media outlets and other business interests in Kuwait.
		
The authorities announced the second batch of citizenship 
		revocations, under article 13, on August 14. Those
		
		stripped of their nationality included
		
		Nabil al-Awadhi, a conservative cleric widely known for his TV talk 
		shows. Under the law, seven of his family members subsequently lost 
		their citizenship. Al-Awadhi had been part of a group of longtime 
		residents called Bidoon who were considered stateless, but had become a 
		naturalized citizen in 1998. According to an official cabinet document, 
		he was stripped of his citizenship based both on undermining the 
		country’s social or economic system and on undermining the country’s 
		higher interest or foreign security.
The revocations on
		
		September 29 included Saad al-Ajmi, the spokesman for Musalam al-Barrak, 
		a leading opposition politician. Al-Barrak was
		
		convicted of
		
		insulting the Emir in
		
		2012, and was arrested in June for “insulting the judiciary,” which 
		drew thousands to the streets until he was released several days later.
		
Al-Ajmi’s citizenship was revoked under article 11 of the 
		nationality law, which allows withdrawing citizenship from anyone 
		naturalized by another country. He told Human Rights Watch that although 
		article 11 was used in his case he is now stateless because he has not 
		been naturalized elsewhere. He said the authorities had not revoked his 
		four children’s citizenship.
Al-Shammari told Human Rights Watch 
		that a court that he petitioned to seek judicial review of his 
		citizenship revocation in July ruled that it had no jurisdiction in the 
		matter. His lawyer said he planned an appeal to the Supreme Court, on 
		the grounds that the country’s legal system presumed innocence and that 
		al-Shammari should have an opportunity to refute the allegations against 
		him.
In December 2013 UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon issued an 
		authoritative
		
		report setting out criteria for determining the lawfulness of any 
		country’s decision to revoke the citizenship of one of its nationals. 
		The report accepted revocation as legitimate for “rendering of services 
		to a foreign government or military force” or committing acts “seriously 
		prejudicial to the vital interests of the State.”
The report 
		concluded, however, that revoking a citizen’s nationality for exercising 
		the right to freedom of speech amounts to a violation of human rights 
		guaranteed under
		
		international law. International law strictly limits the 
		circumstances in which loss or deprivation of nationality leading to 
		statelessness can be recognized as serving a legitimate purpose. When a 
		country revokes a person’s citizenship, it may be required to provide a 
		right of residence in the country.
The secretary-general’s report 
		makes it clear that all revocation decisions must be subject to 
		administrative or judicial review. Extending the revocation of 
		citizenship to the dependents of a person whose citizenship has been 
		legitimately revoked is described as “problematic” in the UN report, 
		whereas it is explicitly prohibited if such loss or deprivation of 
		nationality would render the dependents stateless.
“Instead of 
		targeting their critics in a back-door way, the Kuwaiti authorities 
		should come clean and stop revoking their citizenships once and for 
		all,” Houry said. “While Kuwait continues to strip people of citizenship 
		for no good reason, its reputation as a tolerant country will continue 
		to nosedive.”
For the secretary-general’s report, please 
		see.
		
		http://daccess-ods.un.org/access.nsf/Get?Open&DS=A/HRC/25/28&Lang=E
		
For more information on citizenship revocation in Kuwait, 
		please visit:
		
		http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/08/10/kuwait-5-critics-stripped-citizenship
		
For more information on cases violating the right to free 
		speech in Kuwait, please visit:
		
		
		
		For more Human Rights Watch reporting 
		on Kuwait, please visit:
		
		http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/kuwait
For 
		more information, please contact:
In Sanaa, Belkis Wille 
		(English, Arabic, French, German): +1-967-71 401 2494 (mobile); or
		willeb@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @belkiswille
		In Beirut, Nadim 
		Houry (English, Arabic, French): +961-3-639-244 (mobile); or
		houryn@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @nadimhoury
		In Aman, Fadi Al-Qadi 
		(Arabic, English): +962 79 699 2396 (mobile); or
		qadif@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @fqadi
		
Kuwaiti Law of Nationality, 15/1959
Article 
		13:
The nationality of a Kuwaiti national naturalized by virtue 
		of any of Articles 3, 4, 5, 7 or 8 may be revoked by Decree upon the 
		recommendation of the Minister of the Interior in the following cases:
		
			- 
			
			If the citizenship has been granted through fraud or cheating. The 
			same law may applied to the subject’s dependents.
 
			- 
			
			If the subject has been convicted with a crime related to honesty or 
			honor crimes during 15 years of granting the citizenship.
 
			- 
			
			If the subject has been dismissed from a public office upon 
			disciplinary grounds for honesty or honor related reasons during ten 
			years of granting the citizenship
 
			- 
			
			If withdrawing the subject’s citizenship involves the higher 
			interests of the state or its foreign security. The same law may 
			applied to the subject’s dependents.
 
			- 
			
			If evidence is available from competent authorities showing that a 
			person has promoted principles that will undermine the social or 
			economic system of the country, or belongs to a foreign political 
			party. The same law may applied to the subject’s dependents. In this 
			case citizenship may also revoke of those who obtained it by 
			dependency.
 
		
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