Contrary to popular belief, children born in The Bahamas to illegal migrants are not entitled to be registered for citizenship. Two examples illustrate this point.
Example 1: Peter buys a car, which he then gives to his wife as a gift. Later, the police determine that the car was stolen and confiscate the car. Peter bought the car in good faith and neither he nor his wife knew that the car was stolen. Is Peter or his wife entitled to keep the car? No! But he didn’t know that the car was stolen, and paid for the car. Still, no! Why not? Because the car was illegally obtained (i.e., it was stolen). A legal act (sale of the car) cannot result from an illegal act (stolen car). So even though Peter and his wife did nothing wrong, they cannot profit/benefit from the illegal act (sale of a stolen car). They are not entitled to keep the car.
Example 2: Joseph is a wealthy man. He owns expensive cars, boats and a big house. He has a young stay-at-home wife and two young children who live with him in his big house. One day Joseph is arrested and charged for criminal activity. At the trial, Joseph is found guilty and it is determined that all of his wealth was obtained from his criminal activity. All of his possessions, the expensive cars, boats, big house are confiscated. Joseph’s wife and two young children must move out of the house. They have no other possessions and nowhere to go. Can his wife and young children keep the house? No! Can they keep a car? No! Why not? Because the wealth was illegally obtained (from criminal activity). A legal act cannot result from an illegal act. So even though his wife and children did nothing wrong, they cannot profit/benefit from his illegal acts (criminal acts). They are not entitled to keep Joseph’s wealth.
Now to the case at hand. The Constitution of The Bahamas is the highest law in the land; it is the ‘supreme law’. It is a set of fundamental principles or rules by which a sovereign state (The Bahamas) is governed. The rule of law is a fundamental principle of any constitution, ours is no exception. Any act that is contrary to the rule of law (i.e., that breaks the law) is contrary to the constitution. The constitution cannot condone an illegal act; to do so would render the constitution itself null and void.
Now whereas the Constitution of The Bahamas provides for a person born in The Bahamas to parents who are not Bahamian citizens to apply to be registered as a Bahamian upon attaining the age of 18 years, this entitlement may only be afforded to persons who acted according to the rule of law (i.e., parents who were in the country legally at the time of birth). An illegal immigrant (illegal is the key word) broke the law, and therefore the child of an illegal immigrant is not entitled to apply to register as a Bahamian because the ‘entitlement’ was illegally obtained. Even though the child did nothing wrong, the child cannot profit/benefit from the illegal act (illegal migration of the parents). The child is not entitled to apply to be registered as a Bahamian.
Therefore, all Bahamian citizenships granted in these circumstances are unconstitutional, illegal and therefore void and of no effect.
As regards the children of illegal Haitian immigrants, applying the law of the land will not make these children ‘stateless’. According to article 11 of the Haitian constitution, “Any person born of a Haitian father or Haitian mother…possesses Haitian nationality at the time of birth”. Therefore, the child is a Haitian national at birth. Further, the Constitution of The Bahamas requires that foreign nationals who apply for Bahamian citizenship must first renounce the citizenship of the other country in order to receive Bahamian citizenship. Therefore, even if we assume that these children of Haitian parents are entitled to apply to be registered, given that these children are ‘Haitian at birth’, did they renounce their Haitian citizenship? If not, then by law, Bahamian citizenship cannot be conferred on these persons, making these grants of citizenship unconstitutional, null, void and of no effect.
We are a small country, a few people. Why do we so foolishly give away our country, our birthright? Prime minister, attorney general, minister of immigration, we are a small country, a few people, please do your jobs and protect our country, protect our sovereignty, protect our birthright; otherwise we will be a small country, with many people, but we won’t be Bahamian.
By: Generation Bahamian