However, since 2012 people who want to take Dutch nationality have to hand over a birth certificate and ID from their country of origin to do so, and many refugees don’t have such documents.
‘The government is creating two-tier citizenship,’ Vluchtelingenwerk spokeswoman Dorine Manson told television programme Nieuwsuur. She says the government knew at the time many asylum seekers would not have appropriate documents.
Identity fraud
The organisation says people are now worried they could be sent back after all should the law change again.
Immigration minister Fred Teeven says he sees no reason to treat refugees differently to other immigrants.
‘Foreigners who want to become Dutch have to show they are who they say they are. This is important in stopping identity fraud,’ a spokesman for the minister told the programme.
By DutchNews
Are there other ways to verify without a birth certificate? I totally agree that the government has the obligation to know who they are taking in not just to prevent fraud, but for general safety. However, if there are other ways of confirming who an individual is – then give them a chance to do so. If ‘the government knew at the time many asylum seekers would not have appropriate documents’ some thinking should have gone into alternative methods of how they could ‘show who they say they are’ if they were serious about welcoming the refuges as new citizens of the Kingdom.