Saturday, October 18, 2014

Africa: Tanzania’s new citizens to get land, voting rights

Photo: IRIN. While many Burundians returned home from Tanzania since 2002, many others remained behind (file photo) 

Source: IRIN

DAR ES SALAAM, 17 October 2014 (IRIN) - Over 162,000 former Burundian refugees, who were recently granted Tanzanian citizenship after living in the country for over four decades, will now be able to buy and own land and vote, said a senior government official.

The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) has hailed the move. Most of the former refugees have been living in camps in the western Tanzania regions of Tabora and Katavi since 1972.

"These are now citizens and our constitution provides that a citizen has the right to live anywhere in the country," Mathias Chikawe, Tanzania’s home affairs minister, told IRIN.

Those of their children born in the country will also be allowed to become citizens.

“The [Tanzanian] government will also start the naturalization process for many of their children benefiting some 200,000 people overall,” said UNHCR, noting that “this is the first time in UNHCR's history that naturalization is offered as a solution to such a large group of refugees in a country of first asylum.”

"Those to be granted citizenship are refugees who have stayed in Tanzania since 1972 and [who] have voluntarily opted to stay in the country,” added Chikawe, noting that about 10,000 Burundian refugees had not applied for citizenship. "These are maintaining their refugee status and could be repatriated to their home country,” he explained.

Emphasizing that the new citizens will enjoy all citizenship rights including land ownership, free movement and participation in political activities, Chikawe said, however, that they would not be eligible to run for the presidency “because that right is reserved for those who are Tanzanian citizens by birth.”

Tanzania's President Jakaya Kikwete began the refugees’ naturalization process on 14 October during an event to commemorate the 15th anniversary of the death of the country’s first president, Julius Nyerere. "They have been in the country for a long time and some don't know where to go if asked to go back to Burundi," said Kikwete.

Many Burundians fled their country following a genocide in 1972, while many more left during the 1993-2005 civil war.

While many Burundians have returned home from Tanzania since 2002, others remained behind, with the host government in 2008 offering either to grant them citizenship or repatriate them.

Mixed feelings 

According to Chikawe, former Burundian refugee settlements will now be converted into villages to accommodate the new citizens though some may decide to live elsewhere in the country. 

This is, however, raising concerns among some Tanzanians. “These villages will mean a single tribe - all Hutus - will appear as islands or another nation within a nation,” said Beautus Chambala, a resident of the area of Mpanda. Most of the Burundians who fled the country in 1972 were Hutus.

Dar es Salaam resident Hassan Lesso said: "We hope they will obey the law and abandon hostile tribal relations in their home countries. We are also worried [about] increased cases of crime. There are stories that some refugees still maintain contacts with relatives in Burundi and bring firearms to the camps."

Minister Chikawe told IRIN that the Home Affairs Ministry could revoke the citizenship of former refugees implicated in crimes such as murder or treason. "We have powers to deal with them and kick them out of the country," he said.

A senior political science lecturer at the University of Dar es Salaam, Benson Bana, welcomed the move, saying: “It was a reflection of the Tanzania’s domestic policy of peace, tranquillity, national unity and concord which extends to foreign policy as well.”

Tanzania previously naturalized 32,000 Rwandan refugees in 1982. In February, it concluded the naturalization of some 3,000 Somali Bantu refugees (ethnic Wazigua from Tanzania) who had fled Somalia in 1991, after civil war broke out, according to UNHCR.