EgyptFeatures/Interviews

Report: Relinquishing the Egyptian passport

Egyptians' sense of belonging to the homeland has changed. When people were once proud of their Egyptian citizenship, now Egyptians are racing to apply for the American immigration lottery.
 
According to unofficial reports and statistics starting from 26 January 2011, the day following the revolution, until 25 January 2014, half a million Egyptians have applied for Egypt's quota of 3,500 American immigration visas out of a possible 50,000 visas for various countries around the world.
 
Another phenomenon that has emerged is the relinquishing the Egyptian citizenship to get out of prison, as Al Jazeera news correspondent Mohamed Fahmy did. He was one of three defendants in the case known as “The Marriott Cell”. He gave up his citizenship after his colleague, Australian Peter Greste, was released and deported for being a foreigner. This prompted the wife of the third defendant, Baher Mohamed, to tell the French AFP news agency before he was released pending trial that she wished she could obtain a foreign citizenship for him to get out of prison, as well as citizenship for their children so they could find an embassy of a foreign country to defend them if they are ever imprisoned in the future.
 
At the time of the 25 January revolution, news spread about thousands of Egyptian Copts who were relinquishing their citizenship and migrating to other countries, especially during the year in which the Muslim Brotherhood ruled the country. There was also news about thousands of Palestinians who obtained Egyptian citizenship during that year. Many allege the Palestinians were mostly from Hamas, the Brotherhood branch in Gaza.
 
This change in the relationship between Egyptians and their passports prompted Al-Masry Al-Youm to investigate this issue. We have monitored 1,044 editions of the Official Gazette that publishes decrees by the President and the Prime Minister pertaining to the granting or withdrawal of citizenships, and 1,981 editions that published decrees by the Interior Minister in this regard, bringing the total to 3,025 monitored editions. It took us six months to arrive at the following results.
 
2,865 Egyptians relinquished their citizenship
 
Six interior ministers had during that period issued 136 decrees authorizing 2,865 Egyptians, including 427 non-Muslims (identified by their names because their religions were not stated, while names that did not clearly indicate religion were counted as Muslims) to obtain foreign nationalities from 58 countries, including 14 Arab countries, and relinquish their citizenship because 18 of these countries do not allow dual citizenship. As to the other countries that allow dual citizenship, 424 Egyptians obtained their citizenships and still relinquished the Egyptian nationality.
 
3,951 Egyptians moved to 79 countries
 
The same six ministers issued 196 decrees authorizing 3,951 Egyptians, including 563 non-Muslims, to obtain foreign nationalities from 79 countries, including 14 Arab countries and keep the Egyptian nationality.
 
Citizenship regranted
 
Egyptian authorities granted back citizenship to Egyptians who had to relinquish it to obtain that of another country.
 
Germany was the first country where 1,501 Egyptians obtained citizenship, followed by 453 in Austria, 418 in the Netherlands, 100 in Saudi Arabia, 81 in Norway, 29 in the United States, 23 in Ukraine, 20 in Kuwait, 20 in Japan, 18 in Bahrain, 17 in each of Denmark and Libya, 11 in the UAE,10 in each of China and Iraq, nine in the United Kingdom, eight in each of India and the Czech Republic, six in Italy, and four in each of Taiwan and Brunei.
 
460 Palestinians denied naturalization for security reasons
 
Rejecting requests to acquire Egyptian nationality from a parent, a spouse or a grandparent began late after the revolution. The first rejection was issued on 9 August 2011 and published in the Official Gazette on 4 September of the same year. Four hundred and sixty rejections followed thereafter, including 79 under the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces until 30 June 2012, 259 under President Mohamed Morsi, 98 under President Adly Mansour and 24 under President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
 
13,523 people granted Egyptian citizenship from their mothers
 
Egyptian citizenship was granted to 11,897 Palestinians, 508 Sudanese, 214 Jordanians, 188 Libyans, 160 Yemenis, 120 Syrians and four stateless people by 33 decrees, of which 22 were issued under the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.
 
Hariri: I will not grant my children the Egyptian nationality and I will not retrieve mine
 
Mohamed Mahmoud al-Hariri obtained the Austrian nationality and relinquished his Egyptian citizenship. He was a lawyer in Egypt and traveled in August 1992 to look for a better life. He now works in journalism and has a website called The Egyptian-European Television. He said that he will not grant his children the Egyptian nationality and will not retrieve his.
 
Adib: My wife’s family had first rejected me because I was Palestinian
 
Wael Adib said that he was born in Cairo on 22 April 1976 to a Palestinian father and an Egyptian mother. He obtained the Egyptian citizenship on 23 August 2011. “My wife’s family had first rejected our marriage because I was Palestinian,” he said.
 
Abdel Hamid: My friends ask me to run for parliament, but I refuse to waive my Russian citizenship
 
Amr Abdel Hamid, presenter for the program Al-Hayat Al-Youm on the satellite channel Al-Hayat, said he obtained Russian citizenship from his Russian wife. “As a Russian I can travel easily to the countries of the former Soviet Union,” he said. “My friends ask me to run for parliament, but I refuse to waive my Russian citizenship.”
 
Egyptians who have waived their citizenship never visit Egypt, says activist
 
Hala al-Hawary, Chairman of the Arab-European Center for Consulting, makes an effort to convince Egyptians who have waived their citizenships to retain them. She is also trying to convince German authorities to allow dual citizenship. She said Egyptians who have waived their citizenship never visit Egypt.
 
Nine citizenship rejections cancelled
 
Four ministers have cancelled eight citizenship rejections for four Palestinians, three Syrians and two Jordanians.
 
Articles 3 and 7 most notorious for Palestinians
 
Citizenship rejections are based on Article 3 of the Nationality Law on granting the nationality from the mother and Article 7 on granting it from the husband, the two most notorious articles for Palestinians.
 
Egyptians granted back their nationality
 
The first decree to grant back the Egyptian nationality was issued by the first interior minister after the revolution, Mahmoud Wagdy, on 21 February 2011. There were 481 Egyptians who were thereafter granted their citizenship back after relinquishing it to obtain another country’s.
 
Demands to drop citizenship
 
The Administrative Court received many claims to revoke the citizenship of officials and media personalities allegedly connected with the Muslim Brotherhood, as well as others who obtained it under the Brotherhood. Also, demonstrations, television programs and letters to the President demanded the same.
 
Nationality Law: All those resident in Egypt before 1914 eligible to citizenship, except Zionists
 
The first law on the Egyptian nationality was issued in 1956 and was amended in 1975. It defined Egyptians as all those who resided in Egypt before 5 November 1914, the termination date of Egypt being a British protectorate, excluding foreigners and Zionists.
 
Most famous bearers of dual citizenship
 
Some of these people include Morsi, Atef Sedky, Selim al-Awa and Abdel Latif al-Manawy's children as well as Fakhry Abdel Nour's brother. In addition, the grandson of Former Defense Minister Mohamed Abdel Halim Abu Ghazala obtained a dual citizenship as he was born in the United Kingdom on 12 June 1989 and was authorized to obtain the Turkish nationality by a decree on 28 May 2011 from Interior Minister Mansour Essawy.
 
Nationality withdrawn from Jordanian after 11 years
 
On 26 November 2014, Former Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim withdrew the Egyptian nationality from Siam Seddik Abdel Rahim al-Zaru, a Jordanian, after 11 years due to a legal error.
 
Citizenship dropped because of Israel
 
Decisions to drop the citizenship of Egyptians began on 19 March 2012. Former Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim revoked the citizenship of Sayed Mostafa Mohamed Moussa who had obtained the Israeli citizenship without prior authorization and in violation of the law. Eight other citizenships were dropped for links to Turkey and armed movements.
 
Although the law gives this power to the Cabinet, it was the minister who took the decision.
 
 
Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm 

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