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   Gen. Aung San - 1940


                

Hla Tay - Paysage

                

    Zwe Yan Naing
        Daw Suu

                

    Maw Thu Da Nu

       "Deep Inside"


                

      Aung Khaing

        Puppets

                

           Hanuman

                

   Bagan - Shwezigon

 Buddha 11th Century

                

       Sao Ohn Nyunt                Sir Gerald Kelly 1932

                


     Citizenship



The 1982 Citizenship Law

 

As Robert Taylor observed in External link opens in new tab or windowExternal link opens in new tab or windowhis 2006 Article “The Legal Status of Indians in Contemporary Burma”, the planning for the 1982 Citizenship Law was a consequence of the introduction of the 1974 Burmese Constitution. This preceded the refugee crisis arising in 1978 from Operation Naga Min examined in External link opens in new tab or windowthe “Exodus” page on this website.

 

The necessity for new legislation to deal with citizenship became apparent in the mid-1970s when the bureaucracy found themselves in a muddle over how to handle applications for citizenship, made in the 1950s under immediate post-independence legislation, which had been outstanding in most cases for some twenty years. The confusion was compounded by the abolition at the time of the 1962 military coup of the 1947 Constitution on which the legislation was based.

 

The new legislation was drafted by the Burma Law Commission appointed by the Council of State in 1977. As Taylor noted in his article, the Law Commission toured the country with a draft for public consultation. A revised draft External link opens in new tab or windowwas published in the local press in April 1982External link opens in new tab or window.

 

The new law sought especially to deal with the problem of illegal immigration. By the late 1950s the number of unprocessed aliens in Burma was External link opens in new tab or windowExternal link opens in new tab or windowin the region of two million. Though some 300,000 Indians and 100,000 Overseas Chinese, mainly engaged in the business and financial sectors, had been obliged to leave Burma in the mid-1960s, there remained a hard-core of some 1.5 million unprocessed applicants for either Burmese citizenship or foreign residence rights as well as illegal migrants in a state of limbo.

The law was intended to clarify the legal position of the estimated four per cent of the population who were of Indian or Chinese descent, whatever their citizenship status. General Ne Win set out his intentions External link opens in new tab or windowExternal link opens in new tab or windowin a speech immediately prior to the promulgation of the law.

 

An immediate concern was the position of Arakan Muslims affected by Operation Naga Min, but the new legislation was primarily designed to deal with a nation-wide problem. In this Ne Win was not to succeed, mainly through lack of political will to implement the provisions of the new law.

 

The issue with respect to Arakan is discussed in detail in External link opens in new tab or windowExternal link opens in new tab or windowan article which I wrote in 2017 (at this link).

 

Derek Tonkin


Texts and Commentaries relating to Citizenship and Statelessness


External link opens in new tab or windowCompendium of Legislation relating to Immigration and Citizenship - Online Burma Library

External link opens in new tab or window2008 Constitution of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar - Bilingual Version


1982 Burma Citizenship Law and related documents


   1.     External link opens in new tab or windowUK National Archives Kew (London): Catalogue 1982 File FCO 15/3177 - Burmese Citizenship Law

   2.     External link opens in new tab or windowLetter to the FCO from the British Embassy commenting on the Law - 25 November 1982

   3.     External link opens in new tab or windowMemorandum to the DFA from the Australian Embassy on the Law - 16 November 1982

   4.     External link opens in new tab or windowText of Burma Citizenship Law dated 15 October 1982 and of the External link opens in new tab or window1983 Citizenship Rules

   5.     External link opens in new tab or windowAnother translation of the Burma Citizenship Law dated 15 October 1982, source not known

   6.     External link opens in new tab or windowBurmese text of the 1982 Burma Citizenship Law dated 15 October 1982

   7.     External link opens in new tab or windowSpeech on the proposed citizenship law by General Ne Win on 8 October 1982

   8.     External link opens in new tab or windowLetter to the FCO from the British Ambassador commenting on the draft law - 12 May 1982

   9.     External link opens in new tab or windowText of draft citizenship law: Public Consultation document - 'The Guardian' 21 April 1982

   10.   External link opens in new tab or windowText of the Constitution of the Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma 1974

   11.  External link opens in new tab or window   Extract Fleischmann "Arakan" 1981 - Pages 194 + "Zur Änderung des Staatsanghörigkeitsgesetzes"


1948 Union Citizenship Act and 1948 Union Citizenship (Election) Act and related documents


   1.     External link opens in new tab or windowPermanent Residence of a Foreigner Rules 2014

   2.     External link opens in new tab or windowCompendium of Laws on Citizenship and Residence 1864-1956 R.J. Verma 1961

   3.     External link opens in new tab or windowResidents of Burma Registration Rules 1951

   4.     External link opens in new tab or windowText of the Constitution Amendment Act of 1951

   5.     External link opens in new tab or windowThe Residents of Burma Registration Act 1949

   6.     External link opens in new tab or windowText of the Union Citizenship Act of 1948 (as amended to 1 December 1960)

   7.     External link opens in new tab or windowText of the Union Citizenship (Election) Act of 1948

   8.    External link opens in new tab or window Text of the Constitution of the Union of Burma of 1947

   9.     External link opens in new tab or windowText of the Burma Immigration (Emergency Provisions) Act 1947 - amendments External link opens in new tab or window iExternal link opens in new tab or windown 1955 and External link opens in new tab or windowin 1990

   10.   External link opens in new tab or windowText of the Panglong Agreement of 12 February 1947

   11.   External link opens in new tab or window Text of the Bangladesh Citizenship (Temporary Provisions) Order 1972

   12.External link opens in new tab or window   Text of the Bangladesh Citizenship Law 1951 [where "Pakistan" is substituted by  "Bangladesh"]

   External link opens in new tab or window 13.   Bangladeshi Nationality Law - Wikipaedia 


Miscellaneous related documents

   

    1.    External link opens in new tab or windowUniversal Declaration of Human Rights 1948

    2.    External link opens in new tab or windowConvention and Protocol on the Status of Refugees 1951

    3.    External link opens in new tab or windowText of Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons 1954

    4.    External link opens in new tab or windowBritish Embassy Rangoon - Letter on immigration initialled FA Warner 21 January 1958   

    5.    External link opens in new tab or windowText of Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness 1961

    6.    External link opens in new tab or windowText of Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989

    7.    External link opens in new tab or windowText of Council of Europe Convention on the Avoidance of Statelessness 2006



Articles

 

External link opens in new tab or windowBeyond Federalism: Inclusion, Citizenship and Minorities - 24 June 2024

Aung Ko Ko, Elizabeth L Rhoads et al. :Journal of Contemporary Asia


External link opens in new tab or windowGenocide by Attrition: Fortify Rights  - June 2023

The role of identity documents in the Holocaust and the genocides of Rwanda and Myanmar.


External link opens in new tab or windowThe Challenges of Muslims and other unofficial minorities in Myanmar - 2023

Myanmar Mosaic - Lund University


External link opens in new tab or windowA Legal History of Radicalized Citizenship in Myanmar: Elizabeth L Rhoads - 2023

Citizenship Studies 2023 Volume 27 No. 1 - Routledge


External link opens in new tab or windowThe UN Fact-Finding Mission's Mischievous Use of Historical Sources

Derek Tonkin analyses aspects of the UNFFM report with particular reference at Annex B to the 1982 Law


External link opens in new tab or windowPeggy Brett and Kyaw Yin Hlaing: Myanmar’s 1982 Citizenship Law in Context - November 2020
An analysis of the results of the 1982 Citizenship Law and proposals for reform.


External link opens in new tab or windowAPHR Report on Rakhine State: Annex includes description of the National Verification Card process - 2020

A report by ASEAN parliamentarians on the ASEAN response to the Rakhine crisis


External link opens in new tab or windowTools of Genocide: Fortify Rights - 3 September 2019

National Verification Cards and the Denial of Citizenship to the Rohingya


External link opens in new tab or windowNational Verification Cards: A Barrier to Rohingya Repatriation: Burma Human Rights Network - 11 July 2019

The experience of Rohingya in Burma is that the NVC process is another discriminatory layer in the apartheid system against them.


External link opens in new tab or windowRohingyas' dangerous encounters with papers and cards: Natalie Brinham - Tilburg Law Review 2 July 2019

Drawing on Rohingyas’ historical experiences of documentation and registration in Myanmar, the article explores meanings that Rohingyas attach to their identity documents.


External link opens in new tab or windowThant Myint-U: The Hidden History of Burma – Atlantic Books London 2019

Extract Page 17: “In 1982, a new citizenship law was enacted. There is a common perception that the Rohingya were stripped of their citizenship by this law. That’s not true….”


External link opens in new tab or windowCitizenship and Human Rights in Myanmar: International Commission of Jurists - June 2019

Why law reform is urgent and possible: a legal briefing


External link opens in new tab or windowMyanmar's Citizenship Law as State Crime: A Case for the ICC: Ronan Lee - State Crime Journal 2019

Myanmar’s government insists upon Rohingya participation in discriminatory citizenship processes as a precondition of refugee repatriation to Myanmar; an opportunity for the ICC to assert its jurisdiction.


External link opens in new tab or windowProblems with the Kofi Annan recommendations on citizenship - 16 December 2018

Why the Myanmar Government may have difficulty while accepting 81 of the 88 recommendations

 

External link opens in new tab or windowComment: "Myanmar's 'Rohingya' Problem by Anthony Ware and Costas Laoutides - 27 September 2018

A critical analysis of some aspects of this important publication


External link opens in new tab or windowChinese influx transforming Myanmar's quintessentail city - AP Myanmar Times 2 May 2018

The article highlights the ease with which recent Chinese migrants have secured Myanmar citizenship


External link opens in new tab or windowReport on Citizenship Law: Myanmar: José María Arraiza and Olivier Vonk - RSCAS October 2017

An historical review of citizenship law in Myanmar, with emphasis on the current situation

 

External link opens in new tab or windowExploring the Issue of Citizenship in Rakhine State - September 2017

A fresh look at the claims of Rakhine Muslims to citizenship under the 1982 Law


External link opens in new tab or windowCitizens of Myanmar: Htike Nanda Win - Myanmar Times 22 September 2017

Asking what citizenship means to citizens


External link opens in new tab or windowNational Races and the Exclusion of Rohingya from Taingyintha: Nick Cheesman 2017

External link opens in new tab or window

How in Myanmar "National Races" came to surpass citizenship and exclude Rohingya


External link opens in new tab or windowYunus, 11 Nobel Laureates, urge UN Intervention: The Daily Star - 13 September 2017

Since independence successive Burmese Governments have recognised Rohingya citizenship


External link opens in new tab or windowText of Letter from 12 Nobel Laureates and 22 Distinguished Personalities to the UN Security Council

Press Release by Muhammad Yunus - 13 September 2017


External link opens in new tab or windowStudy on Community Perceptions of Citizenship, Documentation and Rights in Rakhine - UNHCR 2016

A  perceptive and authoritative analysis of problems facing the various ethnic communities in Rakhine State

 

External link opens in new tab or windowExternal link opens in new tab or windowProblems with facts about Rohingya statelessness - Nick Cheesman December 2015

After the 1982 law passed the legislature, initially not much happened. Burma’s bureaucracy embraced it with characteristic creative inertia, doing nothing.


External link opens in new tab or windowA genealogy of 'taingyintha', Myanmar's national races - Nick Cheesman podcast 27 October 2015

Discussion on 'taingyintha' at the Coral Bell Scool of Asia Pacific Affairs


External link opens in new tab or windowLetter to President Thein Sein re: Amending the 1982 Citizenship Law - 13 January 2015

Human Rights Watch  appeal in the light of UNGA Resolution A/RES/69/248 of 29 December 2014

 

External link opens in new tab or windowRohingyas 'have the right' to apply for Burmese citizenship: Radio Free Asia - 13 September 2012

External link opens in new tab or window

Minister of Immigration Khin Ye on eligibility for citizenship for Rohingyas of the third generation

 

External link opens in new tab or windowPresident Thein Sein explains to UNHCR Antόnio Guterres the ‘Third Generation’ rule - 12 July 2012

At their meeting on 11 July 2012 President Thein Sin explained that the descendants of Bengali migrants during British rule were entitled to citizenship from the third generation.


External link opens in new tab or windowThe Rohingya Minority: Fundamental Rights Denied - Amnesty International May 2004

An analysis by Amnesty International of discrimination against the Rohingya, especially over citizenship.



Lists of Ethnic Groups


External link opens in new tab or windowThe 2014 Census: Enumeration Code Book

Population and Housing Census - Ethnicity/Foreign Nationals


External link opens in new tab or windowPyithu Hluttaw statement on the origins of the 135 races

In Burmese. See summary in English in Nick Cheesman's article in 2017 above


External link opens in new tab or windowSpeech by General Saw Maung on 5 July 1989

Includes passage on division of 135 national races into groups


External link opens in new tab or windowList of 135 national races first published in Working People's Daily (Burmese) on 27 September 1990


External link opens in new tab or windowList of 144 ethnicities used at the 1973 Census


External link opens in new tab or windowTables on Race and Language published in the 1931 Census Report


External link opens in new tab or windowCecil Lowis: The Tribes of Burma 1919



Chinese Peoples in Myanmar


Wikipaedia has External link opens in new tab or windowa well-researched paper on Chinese historical migration and residence in Myanmar.


Opening Extract:

"Burmese Chinese, also Sino-Burmese or Tayoke, are a group of External link opens in new tab or windowoverseas Chinese born or raised in External link opens in new tab or windowMyanmar. Although the Chinese officially make up three percent of the population, the actual figure is believed to be much higher. Among the under-counted Chinese populations are: those of mixed background;External link opens in new tab or window[those that have registered themselves as “ethnic External link opens in new tab or windowBamar” to avoid discrimination; those that moved to Myanmar from China during earlier Qing Dynasty because of Manchu rule; new Chinese immigrants and traders that have resided in External link opens in new tab or windowUpper Myanmar since the 1990s (up to 2 million by some estimates) but are not counted due to the lack of reliable census taking."



Comments on the 1982 Citizenship Law


External link opens in new tab or windowExtract from “How in Myanmar ‘National Races’ Came to Surpass Citizenship and Exclude Rohingya”   

Nich Cheesman: Journal of Contemporary Asia - 15 March 2017

 

"The process of rendering stateless hundreds of thousands hitherto identified or self-identifying as Rohingya but now officially designated 'Bengali' was not de jure but de facto. It was not achieved by complying with the terms of the Citizenship Law per se, even though the law’s contents were in their general intentions inimical to the interests of this population, but through their deliberate breach and selective application."


External link opens in new tab or windowExtract from "The Hidden History of Burma"

Thant Myint-U: Atlantic Books London 2019


"In 1982, a new citizenship law was enacted. There is a common perception that the Rohingya were stripped of their citizenship by this law. That's not true. Under the previous law, enacted in 1948, more or less anyone who was living in Burma at the time could register to become a  citizen. Under the new law, taing-yintha native were automatically citizens, and other, for example Indian migrants, who had become citizens under the older, more liberal law were still citizens. Complicating the picture, though, were many undocumented people who were not considered native, like most Muslims in Arakan. It they or their ancestors had arrived in British times (the "Chittagonians"), they could become naturalized as "guest" citizens. Their descendants by the third generation would be considered full citizens. Thus, by today, seventy years and three generations after independence, citizenship should be equal for everyone except  actual and recent illegal immigrants. But that's all in theory. Practice was and is different, and discriminatory."