American Samoans Denied Citizenship
A federal appeals court ruled last Friday that those born in American Samoa do not have a right to U.S. citizenship because they were born in the U.S. territory.
The ruling from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit preserves federal laws that make those born in American Samoa U.S. nationals, but not citizens like people born in Puerto Rico and other territories.
Leneuoti Tuaua, the Samoan Federation of America, and others born in American Samoa believe that as long as American Samoa is a part of the United States, people born in American Samoa have a constitutional right to U.S. citizenship. Under current federal statute, they are labeled as “nationals, but not citizens, of the United States.” Tuaua challenges the constitutionality of these federal laws.
With the American flag having been now flown over American Samoa for 113 years, American Samoans proudly serving in the U.S. Armed Forces, and suffer casualty rates in Iraq and Afghanistan that are seven times the national average - yet still aren't considered citizens.
Yet on the flipside of this, the American Samoa Government are worried that a ruling for birthright citizenship would undermine certain local practices, such as rules that restrict land ownership to people of Samoan ancestry, as well as their Samoan customs and culture.