UAE: Granting Health, Education Benefits To Children Of Female Citizens Limits But Does Not End Discrimination
Geneva – The President of the United Arab Emirates’ decision to treat the children of female citizens as equal to the children of male citizens in the health and education sectors is a step towards reducing discrimination, but will not end it completely, Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor said.
UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan’s announced decision is only a partial solution to the problem, as it provides the children of Emirati women residing in the country with education and health benefits following years of marginalisation.
Health and education are important sectors, and such inclusion will reduce the heavy burdens on families with Emirati mothers—but gaps will remain as long as the resolution does not cover all additional government, professional, economic, and social sectors.
After the decision was issued, Euro-Med Monitor contacted the UAE Ministry of Presidential Affairs, requesting clarification regarding the aforementioned sectors and groups excluded from the decision, but did not receive a response.
For many years, the children of Emirati women have faced multiple forms of discrimination in all sectors, including denial of equal access to health insurance, job opportunities, and education. This treatment has negatively affected their social and familial life, as well as it has become difficult for them to marry in light of the restrictions and marginalisation they face.
The UAE
government has been working to improve the situation of
women in the country recently, as it has passed reforms that
include the adoption of measures to protect women from
domestic violence. However, women and girls still face
discrimination in many important aspects of their
lives.
Any amendment to unfair and discriminatory laws
against women is welcome, but there is an urgent need for a
comprehensive reformation of the current system, in order to
eliminate all forms of gender-based
discrimination.
The UAE's nationality law should be completely amended, since it discriminates against women and vulnerable groups and differentiates between males and females with regard to granting citizenship to their children. The law deprives Emirati mothers married to foreigners of the right to pass their citizenship to their children. It also denies stateless persons of all rights related to citizenship.
Although UAE law grants Emirati mothers the right to apply for citizenship for their children if they have lived in the UAE for six years, and allows children who have reached the age of 18 to apply for citizenship themselves, most women face complicated legal procedures that can extend for years before obtaining approval.
At the same time, the children of Emirati men are granted citizenship at birth without restrictions, even if their mothers are non-Emirati.
There is an
acute need for further amendments be made to the country’s
nationality law, which perpetuates its “second-class
citizen” crisis and reinforces gender-based
violence.
The law can encourage domestic violence; for
instance, Emirati women living abroad with a foreign,
abusive husband cannot escape to the UAE with their
children, whose citizenship is linked solely to their
non-Emirati father.
Article 9 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), which the UAE signed in 2004, stipulates: “1. States Parties shall grant women equal rights with men to acquire, change or retain their nationality. They shall ensure in particular that neither marriage to an alien nor change of nationality by the husband during marriage shall automatically change the nationality of the wife, render her stateless or force upon her the nationality of the husband. 2. States Parties shall grant women equal rights with men with respect to the nationality of their children”.
The President of the UAE should enact a package of comprehensive legislative amendments to harmonise local laws with international human rights legislation and charters, stop the development of partial solutions to larger problems, and provide real guarantees for the enjoyment of human rights by all segments of society.
All prejudice and discrimination against women should be stopped, and the structural shortcomings that affect the rights of many—such as the right to freedom of opinion and expression, to public freedoms, and rights related to political participation—must be addressed.