×

Our award-winning reporting has moved

Context provides news and analysis on three of the world’s most critical issues:

climate change, the impact of technology on society, and inclusive economies.

Thousands of children born in Colombia to Venezuelan migrants left stateless

by Anastasia Moloney | @anastasiabogota | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Thursday, 23 May 2019 17:40 GMT

A Venezuelan migrant child carries a broom and a bucket while he walks in a camp run by the UN refugee agency UNHCR in Maicao, Colombia May 7, 2019. Picture taken May 7, 2019. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez/File Photo

Image Caption and Rights Information

Nearly 1.3 million Venezuelans have settled in neighboring Colombia, fleeing a political and economic crisis in their homeland

By Anastasia Moloney

BOGOTA, May 23 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Thousands of children born in Colombia to Venezuelan mothers are stuck in legal limbo with no identity documents, putting them at risk of statelessness, the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) warned on Thursday.

Nearly 1.3 million Venezuelans have settled in neighboring Colombia, fleeing a political and economic crisis in their homeland that has caused severe shortages of food and medicine.

About 20,000 children of Venezuelan parents have been born in Colombia, according to government figures, and many are not eligible for either nationality, leaving them stateless.

Juan Ignacio Mondelli, UNHCR's senior regional protection officer, said Colombia was committed to addressing the problem but needed to develop a mechanism to identify children who are stateless or at risk of being stateless.

"The recommendation we have is that whatever the path the (Colombian) authorities choose to follow be it a law, a decree .. is that a mechanism is planned that allows the cases currently registered to be resolved," Mondelli said.

"That this changes from being a problem about nationality to a problem about documentation," he told reporters in Bogota.

Stateless people, sometimes referred to as "legal ghosts", are not recognised as nationals by any country. They are often unable to access healthcare and education and cannot travel, get married, open a bank account, rent or own a home.

There is no reliable estimate for the number of stateless people although the U.N. has previously said there could be 10 million.

Unlike most countries in Latin America, Colombia does not automatically grant citizenship to children born in the country.

Under the constitution, children must have at least one parent who is Colombian to obtain citizenship.

Nearly 3,300 children born in Colombia since late 2017 to Venezuelan parents have been registered at the National Civil Registry and have received birth certificates.

But the bottom of the certificate reads: "Not valid to show nationality."

Obtaining Venezuelan citizenship is also impossible - to do so, a Venezuelan parent would have to formally register their child in the country or at one of its consulates in Colombia.

But these are all closed since Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro broke off diplomatic relations with Colombia in February.

Nohemi Luzardo fled Venezuela in 2016 and gave birth to a girl in Bogota 18 months ago.

"I registered my daughter's birth at the registry office but I was told if neither parent is Colombian then she's Venezuelan," Luzardo told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"We don't want to return to Venezuela and anyway we don't have the money to travel so we haven't registered her birth in Venezuela, and so she isn't Venezuelan. She's stateless," said Luzardo, 27, who scrapes a living selling food in the street.

To address the legal limbo, three different bills have been presented before Colombia's congress, including one that seeks to allow children born in the country to undocumented Venezuelan parents to obtain citizenship.

Colombia is providing free emergency healthcare and vaccines to Venezuelan migrant children, and to those born in Colombia, and many Venezuelan children are also going to school there.

"They (stateless people) live in the shadows and end up in practice being excluded," Mondelli said.

(Reporting by Anastasia Moloney @anastasiabogota, Editing by Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

-->