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Kuwait: stateless to be offered Comoros citizenship

More than 110,000 bidoons were born and raised in Kuwait and claim the right to citizenship in the Gulf emirate
Kuwait National Assembly during opening ceremony of new legislative year in Kuwait City, Kuwait on 28 October (AA)

Tens of thousands of stateless people in oil-rich Kuwait will be offered citizenship of the impoverished African nation of Comoros to end their decades-old problem, the government said Sunday.

The stateless people known as bidoons, would be granted "special applications for Comoros' economic citizenship," Kuwait's interior ministry assistant undersecretary Major-General Mazen al-Jarrah told Al-Jarida daily.

Those who accept the offer would be given free residence permits in Kuwait, in addition to a series of incentives like free education and healthcare and the right to employment, Jarrah was quoted as saying.

The process would start as soon as an embassy for Comoros is opened in Kuwait in the coming months.

The oil rich state would give Comoros – one of the world’s poorest nations – economic benefits in return for the citizenships.

More than 110,000 stateless people were born and raised in Kuwait and claim the right to citizenship in the Gulf emirate.

The Kuwaiti government, which describes them as illegal residents, says only 34,000 qualify for consideration for citizenship.

The rest are considered natives of other countries who either emigrated to Kuwait after the discovery of oil five decades ago or were born to these migrants.

Reports of this proposal had previously surfaced in May, when Kuwait announced it would consider following suit of the UAE which had struck a similar deal with Comoros.

In the past three years, bidoons have held demonstrations to demand citizenship and other basic rights, and police have dispersed them using force, arresting hundreds who are on trial for illegal protests and assaulting police.

A Kuwaiti lawmaker in April proposed to send stateless people convicted of breaching public security and protesting to a camp he suggested should be built in the desert.

Comoros is an archipelago state located off eastern Africa and is a member of the Arab League.

Gulf countries have been for years discussing how to deal with thousands of stateless residents in their borders.

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