Legal assistance to non-citizens in international private relations under Iraqi law
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55716/jjps.2019.8.1.12Keywords:
Legal aid for non-citizens,, international private relations,, international conventions,, comparative legislation.Abstract
Citizenship is a general affiliation that has its determinants and
dimensions in the lives of people who belong to a particular community. These
determinants are equality, freedom, identity and justice. As international law
generally gives each country the power to determine who has the eligibility of
citizenship, but the persons (permanent residents, migrants, asylum seekers and
refugees, victims of human trafficking, foreign students, temporary visitors, and
other categories of non-immigrants and stateless persons) who are not
recognized by the state as having actual ties to it, such as the bond of
nationality, face intractable problems, especially in the field of justice,
including the lack of access to legal aid, which is one of the important judicial
principles in the field of litigation. It is used as a measure intended to ease the
burden of litigation for people who are unable to bear judicial fees, lawyers'
and experts' fees and other fees to defend their rights. It is the right of every
citizen to have judicial justice that enables him to exercise his natural and
constitutional rights, which requires protection for this category of people by
providing effective judicial guarantees that help deliver rights to their owners.
This actually requires taking measures that keep pace with the stage and accord
with human rights.