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After years of being stateless, High Court recognises Klang-born man with Malaysian-Filipino parents as citizen

Nalvin was born on June 5, 1997 at a public medical facility in Klang, Selangor to a Malaysian father and a Filipino mother. — Picture courtesy of Nalvin Dhillon

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KUALA LUMPUR, April 5 — The High Court today declared that 24-year-old Nalvin Dhillon — who was born to a Malaysian father and Filipino mother — a Malaysian citizen under the country’s Federal Constitution as he was not born a citizen of any other country, finally putting an end to years of being stateless.

Nalvin, who is due to turn 25 in June, had been trying together with his biological father since December 2009 or slightly more than 13 years ago to have himself recognised as Malaysian.

The decision was delivered by High Court judge Datuk Wan Ahmad Farid Wan Salleh to recognise the boy from Klang as Malaysian.

“The plaintiff has fulfilled the condition precedents of Section 1(e) of Part II of the Second Schedule of the Federal Constitution. Once this is established, the law is that citizenship by operation of law is almost automatic. It is a matter of birthright.

“For the aforesaid reasons, I am making a declaration that the plaintiff is a Malaysian citizen by operation of law under Article 14(1)(b) of the FC read together with Section 1(e) of Part II of the Second Schedule of the FC.

“As a consequential order, the defendants are directed to issue a MyKad to the plaintiff within 21 days from the date of this order,” Wan Ahmad Farid said while delivering his decision through video-conferencing.

The Federal Constitution’s Article 14(1)(b) provides that every person born on or after Malaysia Day and fulfilling any of the conditions in Part II of the Second Schedule is a citizen by operation of law — or automatically entitled under the law to Malaysian citizenship.

Section 1(e) is the condition where the person born within Malaysia is not born a citizen of any country.

Nalvin was represented by lawyer Larissa Ann Louis, while the three respondents were represented by senior federal counsel Nik Isfahanie Tasnim.

Lawyers Low Wei Loke and Mansoor Saat held a watching brief for the Malaysian Bar and the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia respectively.

What happened in this case

Based on court documents, Nalvin was born on June 5, 1997 at a public medical facility in Klang, Selangor to a Malaysian father and a Filipino mother.

His birth was officially registered on July 25, 2001 with a birth certificate subsequently issued.

Since Nalvin’s birth was registered four years after he was born, his birth was made under late registration pursuant to Section 12 of the Birth and Death Registration Act (Act 299) by the National Registration Department (NRD) at the material time.

According to the NRD, there was an absence of both a valid marriage record and registration between Nalvin’s biological parents at the time of his birth; thus, he was considered an illegitimate child in accordance with Section 13 of the BDRA.

Based on Nalvin’s affidavit, his biological mother left the family when he was four years old in 2001, and despite the numerous attempts by both father and son, they have been unable to locate her whereabouts as of today.

In the same year, Nalvin’s father successfully applied for a Malaysian passport for Nalvin and he was granted Malaysian citizenship status in his new travel document which he used to travel to Australia.

Fast forward to 2009, and Nalvin’s father made an attempt to have his son obtain his Malaysian identification card (MyKad) when he turned 12.

Instead, it was discovered that Nalvin’s birth certificate extracted from the NRD’s database had explicitly listed him as a ‘Bukan Warganegara‘ or non-Malaysian.

Subsequent to their discovery, Nalvin’s father had made several attempts to have his son recognised as a Malaysian and obtain a birth certificate stating as such over a period of some seven years.

He had submitted a total of three citizenship applications — December 31, 2009, November 29, 2012 and June 11, 2014 — under Article 15A of the Federal Constitution.

However, the Home Minister through three letters – dated December 8, 2010, January 20, 2014 and April 4, 2016 — rejected their applications without giving any reason.

By the time he received the ministry’s response on his third citizenship application, Nalvin was already aged 19.

Article 15A provides that the federal government may register anyone under the age of 21 as a Malaysian citizen, “in such special circumstances as it thinks fit”.

On September 6, 2019, Nalvin filed a lawsuit via an originating summons against three respondents, namely the National Registration director-general, the Home Ministry’s secretary-general and the Malaysian government.

In his lawsuit, Nalvin sought orders from the court for declaration to recognise him as a Malaysian citizen pursuant to operation of law under Article 14(1)(b) and/or Article 18 of the Federal Constitution, as well as a similar citizenship declaration under Article 19.

Nalvin is also seeking to have the named respondents issued both a birth certificate and MyKad which reflects his Malaysian citizenship within 21 days from the date of the court’s order.

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