THE lack of Thai citizenship of three youth footballers who were saved from the Tham Luang cave has highlighted the hidden problems of stateless people.
The Interior Ministry and the Children 
and Youth Department have confirmed that three of the 13 survivors from 
the Chiang Rai cave are stateless persons. Authorities have promised to 
provide them legal assistance in the nationality verification process 
and if there were no complications in their documents all of them will 
have Thai nationality within six months.
Ekkapol Chantawong, Phonchai Khamluang, and Adul Sam-on, three survivors
 from the Tham Luang cave, are among 500,000 stateless persons in 
Thailand who have to endure limitations in many aspects of their life as
 they are denied some rights and opportunities.
It was also disclosed that many stateless persons have to wait for a 
decade to get Thai citizenship because of the slow verification process.
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 Surapong Kongchantuk, a prominent activist on human rights and 
nationality issues, said that although the Thai government has provided 
basic rights to all persons in Thailand, ensuring compulsory education 
and healthcare, stateless persons still face many complications in their
 lives.
“Theoretically, all people must be under the care and protection of 
being a citizen of at least one state, but in reality there are more 
than 500,000 persons in Thailand who do not have any nationality, even 
though they are born and raised in Thailand,” Surapong said.
He said the lack of citizenship means that stateless persons are denied 
access to many fundamental rights such as travelling abroad, getting 
higher education or employment in some careers, so they do not have many
 opportunities to improve their lives.
According to Surapong, stateless persons can ask for nationality 
verification at their local administrative organisation to acquire Thai 
citizenship. They must provide proof of their birth and lineage and that
 they were born to a Thai national parent. Ethnic minorities born in 
Thailand are eligible to get Thai nationality.
Otherwise, they can submit a bachelors degree or diploma or ask for a 
special grant from the Thai government to get Thai nationality, he said.
Nevertheless, he said the procedure to verify and seek Thai nationality 
is slow and complicated because local administrative organisations often
 do not have enough staff to deal with the overwhelming number of 
requests for nationality verification. Some people have to wait for more
 than 10 years to get Thai nationality and receive a Thai citizen ID 
card. Legal Status Network Foundation chairman Santiphong Moonphong also
 said that due to the complications and the long period of time it takes
 to get Thai nationality, many youths who do not have citizenship lose 
opportunities.
Santiphong said he hoped that the nationality status of three survivors 
from the Tham Luang cave would bring the problems of stateless persons 
to public attention and get prompt solutions from the government.
Source - TheNation 
