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Court ruling: Citizenship in Germany possible without official papers


Saturday April 30, 2022

Foreign nationals can be naturalized in Germany without producing official identity documents -- but only in exceptional cases. This is according to a ruling at the Mainz administrative court.

A Somali living in Germany for over a decade had his citizenship application rejected in 2019 on the grounds of not being able to sufficiently prove his identity and nationality. This is because German authorities generally do not recognize Somali passports and identity cards issued since 1991 due to the overall chaotic conditions in the East African country, which has been in a state of civil war for more than 30 years.

The Somali national, however, had arrived in Germany as a refugee more than ten years ago, and after being granted asylum had fulfilled all other conditions to qualify for naturalization. The plaintiff appealed against this refusal, which was rejected in the first instance. The man defended himself by filing a complaint with the administrative court.

In the administrative proceedings leading up to his naturalization application being accepted, he in the end used signed affidavits by his brother and uncle, who had been naturalized in Sweden and the United States of America, respectively, to confirm their family ties and corroborate his Somali origin.

The court confirmed the man's claim and obliged the defendant city, Worms, to naturalize him. The court ruling was made public on April 25, 2022.

The onus of proof

The judges at the court in Mainz said that these witness statements must suffice in such exceptional cases, where the plaintiff simply cannot meet the onus of proof otherwise expected in standard procedures.

The Somali national was in possession of documents that were not recognized and was thus in a position whereby his "shortcoming in delivering evidence (was) through no fault of his own," the court said, adding that he had proven his identity by other admissible means. In such a situation, according to the court, other evidence such as interviews or statements by witnesses can also be used to clarify identity.

The court specified that in particular, the declaration of the uncle, who still had an old Somali passport dating from before 1991, had been decisive in the ruling. Other supporting documentation admitted in this particular case included the hearing from his original asylum process and the file kept on him at the foreigners' authority (Ausländeramt) for many years to deliver a "coherent overall picture of the identity and nationality of the plaintiff."

With AFP, epd



 





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