Crosswords1 min ago
More Money For The Tax Payer To Shell Out
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."Sir James Eadie, representing the Home Office, said earlier there was a "big issue at stake" in the case, to decide what should happen when someone cannot have a fair appeal over being stripped of their citizenship as a "result of going abroad and aligning with terrorist groups"."
What is stopping someone having a fair appeal, but from the country they chose to join and there align themselves to a terrorist group ? There's nothing stopping them getting a fair appeal from there. If the law works correctly the dismissal ought not take longer than the initial speech and period of uncontrollable laughter before the fair rejection. And then, there's not the bother of returning them back to their adopted nation.
If it comes to that, given that there's no dispute that they joined an enemy terrorist group, why is there a right to appeal the inevitable consequence anyway ?
Some law makers clearly need further training. Either that, or the law interpreters do.
What is stopping someone having a fair appeal, but from the country they chose to join and there align themselves to a terrorist group ? There's nothing stopping them getting a fair appeal from there. If the law works correctly the dismissal ought not take longer than the initial speech and period of uncontrollable laughter before the fair rejection. And then, there's not the bother of returning them back to their adopted nation.
If it comes to that, given that there's no dispute that they joined an enemy terrorist group, why is there a right to appeal the inevitable consequence anyway ?
Some law makers clearly need further training. Either that, or the law interpreters do.
OG, I don't pretend to be knowledgeable about the ins and outs of this case and someone will correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't believe she became a citizen of Syria or that she was there at the behest of that country's government - she joined the jihadi group ISIL and was living in a refugee camp as far as I'm aware. Why then should Syria bear the legal costs [if that's what you are suggesting]?
Because that's where she is. Why shouldn't they ? Or she could pay for her own legal eagles. Whose behest she was or wasn't at is irrelevant. She went there to join those there who were intending to be in power; someone else is though, so dealing with the resultant situation is on their 'to do' list. If they aren't going to deal with it then they should step down for those that will.
//Ms Begum claims she married Dutch convert Yago Riedijk 10 days after arriving in IS territory, with all three of her school friends also reportedly marrying foreign IS fighters.
She told The Times last February that she left Raqqa in January 2017 with her husband but her children, a one-year-old girl and a three-month-old boy, had both since died.//
As she claims to have married a Dutch citizen then best the Netherlands deal with her misfortunes of her own making.
She told The Times last February that she left Raqqa in January 2017 with her husband but her children, a one-year-old girl and a three-month-old boy, had both since died.//
As she claims to have married a Dutch citizen then best the Netherlands deal with her misfortunes of her own making.
-- answer removed --
//International law dictates that no country can make someone stateless//
I imagine the government will argue that stripping her of British citizenship hasn’t left her stateless. With Bangladeshi heritage she has Bangladeshi citizenship.
//according to international law, it is only possible to strip someone of their citizenship if they are eligible for citizenship elsewhere. In the case of UK citizens of Bangladeshi heritage like Shamima Begum, Bangladeshi national law states that citizenship is given automatically at birth through bloodline (jus sanguinis), giving them dual nationality.//
https:/ /www.36 0lawser vices.c om/immi gration -law-th e-case- of-sham ima-beg um-and- the-new -preced ent-it- sets/
I hope the government succeeds in overturning the previous decision.
I imagine the government will argue that stripping her of British citizenship hasn’t left her stateless. With Bangladeshi heritage she has Bangladeshi citizenship.
//according to international law, it is only possible to strip someone of their citizenship if they are eligible for citizenship elsewhere. In the case of UK citizens of Bangladeshi heritage like Shamima Begum, Bangladeshi national law states that citizenship is given automatically at birth through bloodline (jus sanguinis), giving them dual nationality.//
https:/
I hope the government succeeds in overturning the previous decision.
it is more taxpayers money, but i'm sure in this case, most taxpayers would agree. I used to work for an NHS trust and we once went to court over a sex-change case. It would have cost about 100k for the person to get the treatment they were requesting, and the appeal cost more than that in peoples time, legal representation etcbut it was felt it was worth defending, as the local public would want the trust to
Not what I'm suggesting. I'm suggesting that anyone stripped of citizenship because they gone to join elsewhere is not the country of birth's problem. They're the problem of the country they left to join. And the responsibility of the country or countries she is still a citizen of. Let them sort it out, or they can let the person who is no longer a citizen of their country of birth fund their own attempt to force the country to reinstate them.
Shamima wasn't made stateless by the UK. She had citizenship rights elsewhere. If elsewhere didn't want her they should have been quicker off the mark revoking those rights.
Shamima wasn't made stateless by the UK. She had citizenship rights elsewhere. If elsewhere didn't want her they should have been quicker off the mark revoking those rights.
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