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Malaysia drops controversial citizenship plan after backlash: ‘abhorrent and regressive’

The Malaysian cabinet rejected a proposal to amend the constitution that would result in such children having to apply for citizenship, Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution said at a briefing on Friday. The Home Ministry had initially planned to present a bill on the matter to parliament once it gained the cabinet’s approval.

The decision was made amid plans by civil society groups such as Undi18 to protest the proposal outside parliament on Monday.

“These amendments transcend partisan politics as it directly affects Malaysian stateless children and their future,” Undi18 said ahead of Saifuddin’s briefing. It would have been the second street protest against the government in a month.

Saifuddin had previously warned that Malaysia’s existing citizenship laws were open to abuse from the 3.5 million foreigners living in the country. He told parliament on March 11 there were incidents of foreigners refusing to pay hospital fees after giving birth and abandoning their babies, knowing that they would be granted automatic citizenship.

That reasoning did not go down well with critics. Malaysia’s Human Rights Commissioner Ragunath Kesavan last week said that the planned amendments were “abhorrent and regressive” and the government had not shown any justification for it during their engagements.

Other proposed amendments to Malaysia’s citizenship law, such as allowing automatic citizenship to be granted to children born abroad to Malaysian mothers – a right that already exists for Malaysian fathers – has received the cabinet’s greenlight, Saifuddin said on Friday. He added that he would hold an engagement session with backbenchers on Monday regarding the matter.

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