Patrícia Cabral, Legal Policy Officer, European Network on
Statelessness*
The enjoyment of LGBTIQ* rights
varies across Europe, including the recognition of same-sex partnerships or
marriages and the recognition of legal parentage between children and those who
raise them as parents – regardless of biology, gender or sexual orientation. As
a result, rainbow families in Europe (families where a child has
at least one parent who identifies themselves as lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans,
intersex or queer) can face problems with
recognition of civil status, birth registration and access to birth
certificates, leaving some children in these families either stateless or
at risk of statelessness.
Such cases have occurred across
several countries in Europe and reflect a wider concerning trend within the EU, where LGBTIQ*-related
discriminatory laws and practices by Member States impact on the child’s
right to a nationality and their access to EU citizenship. The Court
of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) will now have an opportunity to address
this issue in a pending case concerning a child born to same-sex parents in Spain.
The case before the CJEU
The case before the CJEU, V.M.A. v Stolichna
Obsthina, Rayon ‘Pancharevo’ (C-490/20), concerns a child born in
Spain, to a British mother and a Bulgarian mother, who had entered into a civil
marriage in the UK before the birth of the child. Spain issued a
birth certificate, which recorded both mothers as the child’s parents, but
which does not specify whether one of the women is the biological mother. The
Bulgarian mother subsequently applied for the issuance of a birth certificate
for the child in Bulgaria.
The Bulgarian authorities refused to issue a birth certificate, on the grounds
that no evidence was provided about the child’s parentage with respect to her
biological mother, and that the registration of a birth certificate with two
female parents was contrary to public policy, as same-sex marriages are not
permitted in Bulgaria.
One of the questions asked by the domestic court to the CJEU is
whether the Bulgarian authorities can refuse to issue a birth certificate on
the grounds that the applicant refuses to provide information on who is the
biological mother. The CJEU is also asked to consider how to strike a balance
between the national and constitutional identity of the Member States
(protected by Article 4(2) TEU) on the one hand, and the right to respect for private
and family life and the best interests of the child on the other (Articles 7
and 24(2) of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights).
The domestic court noted that the
refusal to issue a birth certificate by Bulgaria constitutes an obstacle to the
issuance of identity documents and may impede the exercise of the child’s rights
as an EU citizen, asking the CJEU whether this affects the interpretation of EU
law. Even though it recognises that without a birth certificate the child would
be unable to acquire identity documents and exercise EU citizenship rights, the
domestic court does not explicitly address the impact that this may have on the
child’s right to a nationality and the risk of statelessness in its request for
a preliminary ruling.
In the request for a preliminary
ruling, the domestic court assumes that the child would be entitled to British
nationality, considering the impact that Brexit would have in the exercise of
her rights as an EU citizen. However, new evidence has subsequently been
submitted to the court that the UK has since refused nationality to the child
(based on special provisions that do not allow a parent who
acquired British nationality by descent to pass on their nationality to a child
born outside the UK). As neither of the mothers holds Spanish nationality,
although she was born in Spain, the child did not acquire Spanish nationality
at birth. She would need to rely on a safeguard in law which ensures that
children born in Spain who would otherwise be stateless can acquire Spanish
nationality. However, to apply this safeguard it must be demonstrated that the
child is unable to acquire any other nationality. The Bulgarian authorities’
denial of access to identity documents, which are essential for the child to
evidence her Bulgarian nationality and effectively enjoy her right to Bulgarian
nationality, contradict the fact that according to Bulgarian law, the child is
entitled to Bulgarian nationality (see below for further elaboration on this
point).
This poses a particular and paradoxical
challenge in this case, in terms of the ability of the child to provide
evidence that she is effectively prevented from acquiring another nationality
in order for her to be able to take advantage of the Spanish safeguard.
Furthermore, had the child been born in a country without a safeguard that
protects children born stateless on the territory, the situation would remain
unresolved and the child would be stateless due to discriminatory birth
registration practices by the Bulgarian authorities. Given that the UK and Spain have both
confirmed the child is neither a British nor a Spanish national, the child is
currently stateless, or at least at risk of statelessness. While it is
unfortunate that the domestic court did not address the impact on the child’s
right to a nationality, the CJEU is free to reformulate the questions referred
to it and provide all the elements of interpretation of EU law relevant to the
case, including those related to access to EU citizenship and statelessness.
This is a fundamental issue that the CJEU must resolve in this case.
In its request for a preliminary
ruling, the court asks whether Member States have broad discretion as regards
the rules for establishing parentage, however the issue is not the
establishment of parentage but rather the recognition in Bulgaria, of the legal
parentage established in Spain. In line with caselaw from the CJEU and the
European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), the margin of discretion that Members
States have in the recognition of parentage, particularly when this impacts on
the child’s best interests and identity, is narrower than for
the establishment of parentage. As further explained in this piece, doubts
remain as to whether the domestic authorities are refusing to recognise the
legal parentage established between the child and her mothers as evidenced by
the Spanish birth certificate, or whether they recognise the parentage but
refuse to issue a birth certificate. Whichever position the authorities are
taking, it has a severe impact on the child’s rights and the refusal to issue a
birth certificate results in denying her Bulgarian nationality and thus access
to EU citizenship.
Discriminatory birth registration practices negatively impact the
fulfilment of children’s rights
Most, but not all of us, have had
our births registered. Birth
registration involves the official recording of a birth within the
civil registry, which records both the fact of the birth and its
characteristics. It often results in a birth certificate issued by the civil
registrar that provides proof that the child has had their birth registered and
is essential evidence of a child's family ties as well as their place of birth.
These are key aspects of legal identity and can be critical to establishing the
child’s nationality, as nationality is usually acquired either through the parents
(jus sanguinis), the place of birth (jus soli), or a combination of the two.
Lack of birth registration is not
the same as statelessness, yet it heightens the risk of leaving children
without a nationality. Given the key information birth registration provides
about individuals and their links to a State, either through the parents or
place of birth, not having a birth registered or a birth certificate evidencing
registration can contribute to difficulties establishing these links and
consequently expose them to the risk of statelessness. Children in this
situation face severe obstacles in exercising the rights to which they are
entitled under international law such as the 1961 Convention on
the Reduction of Statelessness and the 1989
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), including access to
education, healthcare and social security. In the case of children born to EU
citizens, lack of birth registration and consequent impacts on acquiring a
nationality will also impede on their ability to exercise their rights as EU
citizens, including free movement rights.
Ultimately, it is never in the
child’s best interests to be left stateless, even for a short period of time.
As stressed by UNHCR in its Guidelines
on Statelessness No. 4, “it follows from Articles 3 and 7 of the CRC that a
child must not be left stateless for an extended period of time: a child must
acquire a nationality at birth or as soon as possible after birth”.
In its concluding observations to
the Bulgarian government in 2018 (CCPR/C/BGR/CO/4), the UN Human Rights Committee noted with
concern that same-sex couples married abroad and their children are denied
access to civil registration, and made recommendations towards eliminating
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. Such
discriminatory birth registration practices against same-sex couples often have
a serious impact on the child’s right to a nationality and may render a child
stateless, leading to other violations of the child’s rights. This is the
situation in the current case, where the Bulgarian authorities have refused to
issue a Bulgarian birth certificate for the child on the basis of birth, gender
and sexual orientation.
Somewhat paradoxically, in the
current case the domestic court has seemingly recognised the legal parentage
between the child and the Bulgarian mother, as evidenced by the Spanish birth
certificate, through its conclusion that the child would anyway be a Bulgarian
national by virtue of having a Bulgarian mother (although see below why this
assertion is questionable). Given the legal parentage has been recognised by
the Bulgarian authorities in this way, the refusal to issue a birth certificate
on the basis of establishing parentage constitutes direct discrimination based
on birth, sexual orientation and gender. According to Article 60(2) of
the Bulgarian Family Code, the mother of the child is the woman who gave
birth to the child, therefore the woman who has not given birth is not
considered a mother. However, in a similar situation of an opposite sex couple
this issue would not arise, as both parents would be included in the birth
certificate without requiring proof of parentage. Such discrimination is not
justifiable and requesting information on the biological parentage in this case
therefore constitutes a violation of Article 21(1) EU Charter of Fundamental Rights (CFR).
This discrimination based on the
sexual orientation of the parents and its impact on the child’s acquisition of
nationality is further at odds with the Convention on the Rights of the Child,
ratified by all EU Member States, as all children have the right to be
registered immediately after birth and the right to acquire a nationality
without discrimination of any kind and irrespective of the child’s or their
parent’s status (Articles 2 and 7 CRC). The case also raises other important
questions beyond the scope of this commentary, but which have been discussed by other experts.
Denial of a child’s nationality in practice, despite entitlement in the
law, leads to statelessness
According to the 1954 Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons,
a stateless person is somebody who is not considered as a national by any
State under the operation of its law. This has been authoritatively interpreted by UNHCR as requiring “a mixed question of
fact and law”, meaning that statelessness is not just about the letter of the
law, but about how the competent authorities apply the law in a specific case.
UNHCR also asserts that “under the operation of its law” is not synonymous with
“by operation of law”, a term which signifies that acquisition of nationality
is automatic in nature, as opposed to other non-automatic mechanisms to acquire
nationality (such as through naturalisation).
According to the Bulgarian court,
the question of the child’s right to a nationality does not arise in this case
as a result of the authorities’ refusal to issue a Bulgarian birth certificate
for the child. The court states that the child is still a “Bulgarian national by operation of law”. This suggests
that the child would be automatically considered a national under Bulgarian
law, but it must be noted that nationality cannot be established by court (Article 4 of the
Law on Bulgarian Nationality) and regard must be given to how the law is
applied in practice. According to UNHCR’s guidance, asserting whether a person
is considered a national under a State’s law and practice requires evaluating
evidence issued by the competent authorities. When nationality is acquired
automatically, i.e. “by operation of law”, birth registration is usually the
document that provides evidence of acquisition of nationality. By refusing to
issue a birth certificate, which provides evidence of the legal parentage
between the child and her Bulgarian mother, the authorities are also denying
the child access to identity documents which are essential for her to evidence
her Bulgarian nationality and to effectively enjoy her right to a nationality
and all rights derived from it. By extension, the child is also prevented from
enjoying her EU citizenship, which the CJEU has reiterated to be “the fundamental status of nationals of the Member States”.
As noted by UNHCR, “where the competent authorities treat an individual
as a non-national even though he or she would appear to meet the criteria for
automatic acquisition of nationality” – as in the case at hand, where the
authorities are preventing access to identity documents – “it is their position
rather than the letter of the law that is determinative in concluding that a
State does not consider such an individual as a national”.
Denial of EU citizenship and related rights
Refusing to issue a birth
certificate should therefore be interpreted as a refusal to recognise Bulgarian
nationality, rendering the child stateless. This would also automatically
impact on the child’s access to EU citizenship and on the enjoyment of the rights
derived from it. As the CJEU held in the Zambrano case, Article 20 TFEU “precludes national
measures which have the effect of depriving citizens of the Union of the
genuine enjoyment of the substance of the rights conferred by virtue of their
status as citizens of the Union”. The refusal to issue a birth certificate
means she would be unable to evidence the acquisition of Bulgarian nationality
and has no entitlement to any other nationality of an EU Member State, which
would result in a denial to acquire EU citizenship and entirely deprive the
child from enjoying her rights as an EU citizen.
Furthermore, the CJEU has held
that the concept of public policy as justification for a derogation from a
fundamental freedom must be interpreted strictly. In the Coman ruling (discussed here),
it noted that the obligation to recognise same-sex marriages, for the purpose of
granting a derived right of residence to a third-country national, does not
undermine the national identity of Member States protected by Article 4(2) TEU
or pose a threat to public policy. While Member States are free to decide
whether to allow marriage between persons of the same sex, they are precluded
from imposing national measures which may obstruct the exercise of free
movement rights and such measures must comply with the EU Charter of
Fundamental Rights. Although in Coman the
CJEU addressed the granting of a derived right of residence to a third-country
national who was married to an EU citizen, the principles outlined in the
judgment could be applied to the present case in V.M.A. v Stolichna Obsthina.
Upholding EU commitments to equality for rainbow families
The EU has made important strides
towards recognising and upholding the rights of children of rainbow families
and their parents in recent years, not least with the recent introduction of a
five-year LGBTIQ Equality Strategy, which includes protecting the
rights of rainbow families as one of four key pillars for action between
2020-2025. As President von der Leyen asserted in her State of the Union address, “if one is parent in one
country, one is parent in every country”. As part of the strategy, the European
Commission commits to bringing forward a legislative initiative on the mutual
recognition of parenthood and to explore possible measures to support the
mutual recognition of same-sex partnership between Member States. This builds
on work in recent years by the Commission under its List of Actions to advance
LGBTIQ equality to address free movement and cross-border issues, through its
dialogue with Member States to remove obstacles concerning the recognition of
birth certificates of children born to same-sex couples in another Member
State.
Furthermore, in order to improve
legal certainty for EU citizens exercising their free movement rights, and to
ensure a more effective and uniform application of the free movement
legislation across the EU, the European Commission committed in the LGBTIQ Equality
Strategy (as also described in the EU Citizenship Report 2020) to review the 2009 guidelines on free movement in 2022 and to
ensure that the updated guidelines reflect the diversity of families, and to
help all families, including rainbow families, to exercise their right to free
movement.
Through these initiatives, the EU
demonstrates the responsibility of both the EU and its Member States to remove
barriers to birth registration and to ensure the recognition of birth
certificates of children born to rainbow families, the legal parentage of the
children and any consequences on the child’s right to a nationality.
In 2021, the EU will publish
a 2021-24 strategy on the rights of the child, providing a
comprehensive framework for EU action to promote and protect children’s rights,
and including recommendations for action by other EU institutions, EU Member
States and stakeholders. This presents a further opportunity
for the EU to outline action to protect the rights of children of
rainbow families, including the right to a nationality.
The role of the courts in respecting the best interests of the child
and upholding the child’s right to a nationality
Nationality law usually falls
within a Member State’s competency. However, as the CJEU emphasised in Rottman, when exercising their powers in the sphere of
acquisition and loss of nationality, Member States must have due regard to EU
law, including upholding the EU’s values and the rights enshrined in the EU
Charter of Fundamental Rights. (See discussion of later CJEU case law here)
Under its Article 53, the level
of protection granted by the provisions of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights
is at least equivalent to the protection granted by the European Convention on
Human Rights (ECHR) and international law, including the CRC. It is therefore
essential for the CJEU to draw from international jurisprudence on the right to
respect for private and family life in the consideration of this case, as well
as to consider the right to a nationality, the principle of non-discrimination
and the best interests of the child in line with international human rights
law.
Case law from the ECtHR affirms
that the recognition of parentage and acquisition of nationality fall within
the ambit of the right to respect for private and family life (e.g. Mennesson and Genovese),
as protected by Article 8 ECHR and Article 7 CFR, and provides guidance to its
interpretation. Particularly in Mennesson,
the ECtHR has stressed that respect for private life requires that everyone
should be able to establish details of their identity as individual human
beings, which includes the legal parent-child relationship, emphasising that
children have a right to legal identity.
The child’s right to a
nationality is further protected under Article 15 UDHR, Article 24(2) ICCPR,
and Articles 3 and 7 of the CRC. The UN Human Rights Committee has recently
found that failure to identify statelessness and assess a child’s nationality
status led to a violation of the right to a nationality (Zhao v Netherlands). Furthermore, in their General
Comment No 14, the Committee on the Rights of the Child recognises that the
best interests of the child might conflict with other interests, including the
public interest, and notes that authorities must bear in mind that the right of
the child to have their best interests taken as a primary consideration means
that the child's best interests are not just one of several considerations, nor
should they be considered on the same level as all other considerations.
Rather, they take priority in all circumstances, “especially when an action has
an undeniable impact on the children concerned” (CRC General
Comment No 14 para 40), as is the situation in this case.
The courts play a key role in
interpreting national legislation and thus aligning domestic practice with the
regional and international human rights framework. While domestic courts must
not lose sight of their international obligations, the regional courts have a
further responsibility to ensure that the diversity of national jurisdictions does
not compromise respect for fundamental rights or the best interests of the
child. Cases similar to the one presently before the CJEU have been reported
across Europe, with children born to same-sex couples facing discrimination in
recognition of civil status documents and in access to birth registration and
identity documents, particularly in Poland, Bulgaria and Ireland.
The nationality laws of all Member States must be applied in a
non-discriminatory manner and with respect for fundamental rights, especially
when they have a direct impact on the enjoyment of EU citizenship. Currently,
children are being born stateless or at risk of statelessness in the EU and
denied EU citizenship, solely because of a prejudice towards their parents’
sexual orientation. The CJEU therefore has an essential role to play in
supporting progress towards a seamless implementation of international
standards on statelessness and human rights law in all EU Member States, and
towards a Europe where no child is born stateless.
*Reblogged
from the European Network on Statelessness blog
Barnard & Peers: chapter 13
Photo credit: Laurent Verdier,
via Wikimedia
Commons
Thank you for profound work on the topic.
ReplyDeleteWhat is the right of a child to have his/her biological mother mentioned as her mother in birth certificates? If there is such a right it would immediately imply that not just either one of the mothers can be recorded as the mother into official registers, which will have profound effects in further life. Cannot this justify in part the rigid attitude of the national authority?
Is the case not about evidence, and as such a piece of paper originating from another member state is but one possible offering?
Are we to expect that the CJEU will rule on the issue of birth certificate as a vehicle for EU citizenship, mentioning at the same time very helpfully that it will not be commenting on such side issues as right to heritence (based often on parental questions)?
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