On July 25, 2022, Liberia enacted an amendment (Amendment Law) to the 1973 Aliens and Nationality Law (1973 Law). Among the key changes that the Amendment Law brought about are the replacement of a provision that allows only men to pass on their Liberian citizenship to their children by one that affords women the same right and the repeal of a ban on dual citizenship.
Birthright Citizenship Clause
One of the key provisions of the Amendment Law abrogates a discriminatory provision in the 1973 Law barring women who have children outside of Liberia from passing on their Liberian citizenship to their children. The 1973 Law provided that “[t]he following shall qualify to be citizens of the Republic of Liberia at birth: … A person born outside Liberia whose father (i) was born a citizen of Liberia; (ii) was a citizen of Liberia at the time of the birth of such child, and (iii) had resided in Liberia prior to the birth of such child.” (1973 Law § 20.1.) The Amendment Law replaced the above language to afford the mother the same right as the father, stating that “[t]he following shall qualify to be citizens of the Republic of Liberia at birth: … A person born outside of the Republic of Liberia, whose father or mother (i) was born a citizen of Liberia; or (ii) was a citizen of Liberia at the time of birth of such person.” (Amendment Law art. 1(1).)
Dual Citizenship
The Amendment Law also repealed a ban on dual citizenship under the 1973 Law and accorded Liberians the right to hold dual citizenship. The 1973 Law expressly barred dual citizenship and made acquisition of citizenship of another country cause for the loss of Liberian citizenship. (1973 Law § 22.1.) Such loss was automatic upon the acquisition of another citizenship “without the institution by the Government of any proceedings to nullify or cancel such citizenship.” (§ 22.2.) In a 2019 decision, the Liberian Supreme Court found section 22.2 of the 1973 Law unconstitutional on the basis that a mandate that stripped Liberian citizenship automatically upon the acquisition of another citizenship constituted a violation of the due process clause of Liberia’s Constitution (section 20(a)). The court stated:
Nevertheless, this decision did not invalidate the ban on dual citizenship; it merely required that the relevant state institutions afford Liberian citizens who acquire citizenship of another country due process before they take away their citizenship.
The Amendment Law goes one step further and invalidates the ban on dual citizenship, stating that
Article 1(7) of the Amendment Law also repealed section 22.1 (Acts causing loss of citizenship) of the 1973 Law, which, among other things, listed acquisition of citizenship of another country as one of the causes for the loss of Liberian citizenship. It also repealed section 22.2 (Citizenship lost solely from performance of act) of the 1973 Law, a provision that made loss of citizenship upon acquisition of citizenship of another country automatic without any proactive action on the part of state institutions. Significantly, the Amendment Act nullified these provisions nunc pro tunc (retroactively).
Limitations of Dual Citizenship
According to article 4 of the Amendment Law, Liberians who hold dual citizenship will be ineligible to hold any elected public office, and any such person interested in holding an elected public office must renounce the citizenship of the other country at least one year before making an application to the National Election Commission to be a candidate. In addition, a Liberian citizen who holds citizenship of another country is ineligible for appointment as minister of finance and development planning, minister of defense, and executive director of the Central Bank of Liberia.
Hanibal Goitom, Law Library of Congress
October 13, 2022
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