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Amrit Lohia's avatar

The issue of de facto statelessness was already considered by the Supreme Court in Pham v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] UKSC 19, where a unanimous 7-judge court held that it's permissible under s.40(4) of the 1981 Act for the Government to render someone de facto but not de jure stateless. That presumably is precisely why the panel refused permission to appeal in this case! Meanwhile, Mr Pham did apply to Strasbourg, and his application was eventually communicated to the Government for a response in November 2020 (https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/?i=001-206794), after which the European Network on Statelessness and the AIRE Centre were also granted permission to submit a third-party intervention (https://www.statelessness.eu/updates/publications/ens-and-aire-centre-file-third-party-submission-ecthr-pham-v-uk). But since then, the case appears to have remained pending in the Strasbourg backlog, with no further update.

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