From stateless to citizens: Kenya’s success offers hope in Africa

Published: 10/Oct/2024
Source: Context News (Thomson Reuters)

By Nita Balla

NAIROBI – Nosizi Dube beams with pride as she clutches her newly issued Kenyan passport.

For many, obtaining a passport might be a mundane task, but for 24-year-old Dube, who was born into the stateless Shona community in Kenya, it symbolises the end of a gruelling journey towards recognition and the beginning of new opportunities.

« Being stateless is like you don’t exist. You look like everyone else, but because you have no identification documents you live in the shadows, unable to do basic things like go to school or even get a mobile phone number, » Dube told Context.

« Getting recognition as a Kenyan citizen has given me visibility and rights just like everyone else. I feel like I am free, like the chains of statelessness have been broken. »

Now a trailblazer as the first Shona woman in Kenya to graduate from university, Dube hopes to go to Geneva next week to attend a major intergovernmental meeting marking the end of a global campaign to end statelessness within a decade.

Read further: https://www.context.news/socioeconomic-inclusion/from-stateless-to-citizens-kenyas-success-offers-hope-in-africa

Themes: Apatridie, Cartes d’identité et passeports, Naturalisation et le mariage
Regions: Kenya
Year: 2024