09-07-2015, 02:22 PM
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#1
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2015
Location: France
Posts: 1,534
Rep Power: 12
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There are more Greeks like me
Quote:
200,000 young people born or raised in Greece are denied Greek citizenship
New video launched to support campaign calling on the European Union and the Greek government to ensure that Greek citizenship is made available to children born and/or raised in Greece who are denied the status because their parents are immigrants.
The one-minute advertisement features a number of young people explaining why they want to have the same rights as most of their peers. “I belong to this country,” says one, while another says that she already feels “like a citizen of
this country”. The video also hears from youths with Greek citizenship calling for their friends to enjoy the same rights as them.
Children born in Greece to parents who are not Greek citizens are not entitled to automatic Greek citizenship, even when they become of age. If their parents are from non-EU countries, then the children face discrimination in a range of
areas. For one, they are required to apply for a residence permit to live in the only country they know. As non-EU citizens, they don’t enjoy the same freedom of travel as their Greek peers and they also face discrimination in the labour
market. Political rights are also denied to them.
The video was produced by Generation 2.0 for Rights, Equality and Diversity (Generation 2.0 Red) Equal Citizens: Campaign for the Right to Citizenship . According to its website, it is “a youth organisation that combines research and social action to promote
rights, equality and diversity and to combat racism, xenophobia, and discrimination”.
It says that denying citizenship to these children “leads to their social exclusion and stigmatisation as ‘others'”.
On its website, the group is collecting signatures for a petition calling on the European Union and the Greek government to ensure that children born and/or raised in Greece can apply for Greek citizenship.
In 2013, the government last year scrapped a law allowing second-generation migrants to obtain Greek citizenship but has yet to replace it. The 2010 citizenship law, passed by a Pasok government, allowed a child born in Greece to
immigrant parents who had been living in the country legally to apply for citizenship. The children had to prove that they had spent at least six years in Greek schools.
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