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Is that true that illigitimate cannot anthenticate their papers in UAE embassy?

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Is that true that illigitimate cannot anthenticate their papers in UAE embassy?

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3 ANSWERS


  1. Yes


  2. Pls read the following:

    Sultan issues law on the care of destitute children

    posted on 18/07/2006

    His Highness Dr Sheikh Sultan Bin Mohammad Al Qasimi, Supreme Council Member and Ruler of Sharjah, has issued law No 3 for 2006 on the care of destitute children. The law defines destitute child as the one who is born to unknown parents, the illegitimate child of a UAE national mother who does not wish to support it, the child whose parents are dead, separated by divorce, or going through disputes, the child who has one or both parents in prison, the child who has one or both parents suffering from mental illness or contagious disease or the child who is repeatedly subjected to violence by one or both parents.

    It stipulates that the Department of Social Services is the authority concerned with the children deprived of social welfare and that no custody of any such child must be granted without obtaining the department's written consent. As per the law, a permanent committee shall be formed to decide the suitable families or entities to take care of the destitute children. (Emirates News Agency, WAM) .

    And also the following:

    Two illegal women afraid of seeking amnesty

    By Sunita Menon, Staff Reporter

    Published: July 01, 2007, 00:35



    Dubai: Two women fear to seek amnesty because they have illegitimate children.

    The women, in their late 30s, were seen hovering around an amnesty centre in Sharjah with their young children.

    They wanted to know the procedure to go home. The authorities have announced a three-month amnesty during which illegal residents must either leave the country or legalise their status.

    The women fear they will be arrested because they have illegitimate children.

    The women told Gulf News that they have their passports, but do not have any documents for the children.

    They had come to the UAE on housemaid visas to work with families but absconded after they learned that they could make more money working part-time in various houses.

    "I want to go home now. It is becoming difficult for me to work as well as take care of my child. At times I have to take my child to work," said one woman. She said the child's father left her soon after their son was born.

    "He was an Indian whom I befriended after leaving my sponsor's house. I do not recollect where he was employed."

    "Once the baby was born I vacated the house to avoid trouble. Since the child was born I have lived in constant fear of the authorities," she said. But the woman cannot prove that the two-year-old boy is her own.

    K. Mathew, president of the Indian Association Sharjah, told Gulf News that the association has been receiving such cases since the amnesty was declared. "The women are advised to approach a senior Indian consul who is present at the association to assist amnesty seekers. But the women are required to provide proof that the child whom they claim as their own is indeed theirs."

  3. for sure.

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