I was going to ask about the conditions of statelessness again, just to follow up on something, because you said this was only under 18. There's this ugly practice in certain parts of the world of using child soldiers. They would be under 18. It would be a series of very unusual circumstances if you were to find yourself there. Since there are only eight cases and six are still pending, is the case of statelessness...? You described the conditions it could be under.
Am I to understand they would be countries that do birth citizenship or lineage, like Germany only does? You have to prove that you have some type of German ancestry. There's this large population of permanent residents of Turkish heritage. There's quite a large population of ethnically Polish people who live in Germany but cannot become citizens of Germany. In those situations, a child born there to a Canadian parent would be potentially stateless.
I'm trying to understand. Is that one of the countries where you could find yourself in a situation of statelessness, or is it more like in Dubai, which simply has a group of citizens? Again, you cannot be naturalized as a citizen in Dubai if you are from overseas.
Is it those types of countries? I'm trying to understand this statelessness at birth that you could experience.