Advertisement
Malaysia
This Week in AsiaPeople

Arrest of stateless teen in Malaysia highlights plight of Sabah’s 1 million non-citizens

Rights groups say stateless people in the country are often treated as undocumented migrants without basic protections

2-MIN READ2-MIN
Listen
People walk past a mural in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. Photo: Tamara Hinson
Ushar Daniele
The arrest of a 17-year-old stateless teenager during a school outing to buy Eid clothes at a Sabah mall for allegedly failing to show valid residence papers, has returned scrutiny to Malaysia’s treatment of undocumented people.

Niko Ansboy, a student at Borneo Komrad, an alternative school for stateless children, was waiting outside a store during a school trip to the 1Borneo Hypermall when police detained him on Sunday.

He was stopped by officers patrolling after the Kota Kinabalu District Police Headquarters received reports of a spate of thefts.

Advertisement

Acting Kota Kinabalu police chief Superintendent Syed Lot Syed Ab Rahman confirmed the arrest, saying Niko was detained “for further action … for being in Malaysia without valid travel documents”. The teenager was yet to be released on Monday.

Niko Ansboy is a student at Borneo Komrad, an alternative school for stateless children. Photo: Handout
Niko Ansboy is a student at Borneo Komrad, an alternative school for stateless children. Photo: Handout

According to official government data, Sabah is home to more than 1 million non-citizens – including stateless and undocumented residents denied legal status by Malaysia’s restrictive citizenship laws, even for those born and raised in the country.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x