We don't have any control over the nationality laws of other countries. They vary quite dramatically throughout the world. If someone could be a dual citizen and then in another country—and this has happened in Canada, actually, whereby people have become stateless because of the passage of a law in another country. It happened to about 100,000 Canadian-born women whose citizenship was attached to their spouse. When the U.S. passed the Cable Act in 1927, I believe it was, they became stateless. A lot of them were living in Canada with their American husbands at that time.
We have no control over those laws. Taking away citizenship with the understanding that the person may have access to another citizenship is, I think, very dangerous, and it will lead to statelessness.