Document #1150168
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
The following information was provided in a
27 February 1996 telephone interview with an official of the
Embassy of the Syrian Arab Republic in Washington, DC.
A child of Syrian nationals living outside
of Syria can be registered at a Syrian consular office if the
marriage of the parents is officially registered in Syria and if
the father of the child is Syrian. If the father is not Syrian, the
child will not be registered as a Syrian national, as citizenship
is passed through the father.
The parents must provide the Syrian
consular office with their marriage certificate or a copy, thereby
proving that the marriage was officially registered. The father
must provide proof of Syrian citizenship; any Syrian official
document, such as a passport or a national identity card, can be
used to provide proof of Syrian citizenship.
In Syria, a child should be registered with
the authorities within 30 days of his/her birth. However, for
Syrian nationals living abroad, the Syrian authorities are more
flexible; there is no age limit by which a child must be
registered. The official stated that a child could be registered at
18, for example. The official also stated that the procedure to
register a child is the same, despite the child's gender and
regardless of the religion of the parents. The child's birth
certificate must be presented at the Syrian consular office along
with a birth registration form completed by the parents. The
official stated that the birth registration form is only written in
Arabic. There is no cost to register the child.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the DIRB within time constraints. This Response is not, and does
not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular
claim to refugee status or asylum.
Reference
Embassy of the Syrian Arab Republic,
Washington, DC. 27 February 1996. Telephone interview with an
official.