Selangor Journal
Human Resources Minister V. Sivakumar (left) listens on as Home Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail speaks during a press conference following the special foreign workers’ management meeting in Putrajaya, on January 10, 2023. — Picture by BERNAMA

Saifuddin Nasution refutes allegations of granting citizenship to foreigners

POKOK SENA, Aug 26 — Home Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail today dismissed allegations his ministry is in the process of granting Malaysian citizenship on a large scale to foreigners, especially from China.

Without elaborating on the allegations, he described them as terrible accusations without a sense of responsibility, which impacted the ministry’s efforts to resolve the current citizenship application issue.

“This is what we are doing and it is not easy, because this issue of citizenship is highly sensitive, but I reject completely the accusation that this is a process of granting citizenship to foreigners, especially from China.

“Give us the space to resolve the issue of the future of children from Malaysian families whose marriage registration process is not done accordingly, and now there are several problems, and we want to help,” Saifuddin Nasution said.

He was speaking to the press after presenting a donation to purchase a hearse to Ar-Raudhah Mosque, Sungai Durian, earlier today.

At the event, the minister also presented the citizenship application approval letter to Khatanak Sayyan, 19, who previously had no identity document since birth.

Commenting further, Saifuddin Nasution said there were more than 140,000 citizenship applications received by his ministry, of which 9,000 had been processed, including applications that had been approved.

He added if the data related to the granting of citizenship is twisted and disseminated, it could give a negative perception of his ministry’s efforts to resolve citizenship issues, including many that were caused by delays in marriage registration.

“There were various reasons for this; sometimes parents fail to immediately register a marriage, while in the case of citizenship, the important prerequisite document is the marriage certificate. When there is a lack of that, over time, problems arise for the children.

“So, when they (parents) try to correct that, they submit the application and it takes a long time (to be processed), in this case, 19 years, but there are 20 years, 15 years is normal, also 12 years. So that’s what I said, that the purpose of granting, simplifying the approval for a case such as this, Malaysian parents and children were born here,” Saifuddin Nasution said.

Previously, the National Registration Department (NRD) was reported to have denied claims that about 54,000 Chinese nationals are in the process of being granted Malaysian citizenship, supposedly to become DAP voters.

— Bernama

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