Stupid Question ™
By John Ruch
© 2003
Q: If I renounced
—Bill Miller
A: The
Not only
would virtually all countries bar you from entering, they would probably
imprison you indefinitely because there would be nowhere to deport you to. The
This would
be an immediate problem because the standard citizenship renunciation procedure
requires the deed to be done before a
On the
other hand, unless you were dead serious, you probably couldn’t renounce your
citizenship anyway. In a 1998 court case, a renunciation was thrown out because
the citizen sought to retain one benefit of
Involuntary
statelessness is a serious global problem. Millions have lost all citizenship
rights when their government collapsed or stripped them of rights, usually for
ethnic or religious reasons. Victims include ethnic Albanians in Kosovo, the
Roma (or Gypsies), the so-called Bedoons in
Under United Nations conventions, most countries will provide such refugees with a “Stateless Person” travel document—an ersatz passport giving them some identity and the ability to travel in search of a permanent home.
As a willingly stateless person, it is unlikely you would qualify for this document.
Another solution is to invent your own passport, the trick pulled by Garry Davis, a US World War II vet.
On
However,
six countries have officially recognized, in writing, the WSA passports as
valid:
Not exactly
a dream trip, but it’s the only travel package available for the stateless
tourist.