A/71/254
Balkans. 28 Where deportations take place without consent, minorities may face
numerous obstacles to their basic human rights, including lack of access to personal
documents and statelessness; problems repossessing their property or obtaining
housing; difficulties accessing education, health, employment and social welfare;
and separation from family members. In some cases, loss of temporary protection
status in host countries and the forced repatriation to their countries of origin,
coupled with the lack of adequate policies for the integration of returnees, have
resulted in minority communities being forced into continuous migration. 29
5.
Specific vulnerable groups
(a)
Stateless persons
72. Minorities are often disproportionately affected by statelessness (see
A/HRC/7/23, para. 20), 30 as a result of discriminatory nationality and citizenship
legislation which may deny or deprive the citizenship for some ethnic, linguistic,
racial or religious groups, or because of discriminatory implementation of
nationality laws on similar grounds. Minorities can also be at higher risk of
statelessness as a result of lack of access to personal documentation.
73. Stateless persons are particularly vulnerable as they do not enjoy the right to
nationality or any of the corresponding human and civil rights, and they may be
targeted, or not adequately protected, by national authorities. In times of
humanitarian crises, conflict or natural disasters, this lack of protection can be
particularly acute. Statelessness can often be a root cause of forced displacement,
particularly in times of crises. Forced displacement can in turn heighten the risks of
becoming stateless, particularly as documents may be lost in flight.
74. In Myanmar, for example, discriminatory citizenship laws have led to the
statelessness of the Rohingya, who continue to face particular obstacles in accessing
humanitarian assistance, which was particularly highlighted during the outbreak of
violence in 2012 (see A/HRC/32/18, paras. 19 and 26).
75. In particular, it can be especially challenging for minorities affected by crises
to obtain documentation or the replacement of lost or destroyed documentation
given their status as minorities and as displaced persons (see A/HRC/26/33/Add.2,
para. 21).
(b)
Minority women and girls
76. Owing to multiple
challenges face minority
According to the General
conflict and post-conflict
and intersecting forms of discrimination, specific
women and girls affected by humanitarian crises.
Recommendation on women in conflict prevention,
situations of the Committee for the Elimination of
__________________
28
29
30
16-13193
For example, see Human Rights Watch, “Rights displaced: forced returns of Roma, Ashkali and
Egyptians from Western Europe to Kosovo”, 27 October 2010, available from
https://www.hrw.org/report/2010/10/27/rights-displaced/forced-returns-roma-ashkali-andegyptians-western-europe-kosovo.
Angela Mattli and Stephan Müller, “Lost in transition: the forced migration circle of Roma,
Ashkali and Balkan Egyptians from Kosovo” (Ostermundigen, Switzerland, Society for
Threatened Peoples, 2015). Available from https://assets.gfbv.ch/downloads/kosovobericht_low_
doppelseiten_online.pdf.
Denial or deprivation of citizenship and statelessness affects some 15 million people in
49 countries, particularly those belonging to minority groups.
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