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7 - China's Citizenship Law and the Chinese in Southeast Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2015

Leo Suryadinata
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore (NUS)
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Summary

This chapter deals with China's citizenship law and the Chinese in Southeast Asia during three periods, namely, the Qing (Ching) Dynasty, the Republican period, and the People's Republic (PRC) period. It examines the contents of these laws, why they came into being, how they were implemented, and what their impact was on the ethnic Chinese in Southeast Asia. The main emphasis will be on recent developments, that is, after the emergence of the PRC.

There are approximately 23 million Chinese in Southeast Asia, forming the largest Chinese community — about 80 per cent — outside China. Of the ten Southeast Asian countries, the Chinese in Indonesia are the largest in absolute numbers (about 6.2 million), followed by Malaysia (about 5.5 million), Thailand (about 5.2 million). The smallest number is in Laos (about 10,000). In terms of percentage of the Chinese to the non-Chinese population, however, Singapore has the highest (about 77 per cent), followed by Malaysia (24.8 per cent) and Brunei (16 per cent). The lowest is still Laos (0.4 per cent).

The majority of the Chinese who came to Southeast Asia before Western expansion was mainly Huashang (Chinese traders), and their number was relatively small. Only after Western colonization, because of the pull and push factors in China and Southeast Asia, did a large number of the Chinese arrive in the region — many were Huagong (Chinese coolies). Of course, there were also traders but they formed a minority.

Although many Chinese in Southeast Asia were coolies, the most significant among them with regard to law was the commercial group. Thus, the Chinese came to be known as the “trading minority of Southeast Asia”. As time passed, the Chinese formed the middle class in their adopted countries — in Thailand, they even became both the economic and political élite.

In colonial Southeast Asia, the national status of the Chinese was not an issue until the nineteenth century when the Western powers imported Chinese coolies, and the Chinese overseas became politically important in the politics of mainland China. The ethnic Chinese were the source of both political and economic support. Not surprisingly, there was a tussle between the Western colonial powers and Qing China over control of the Chinese through the “nationality (citizenship) law.”

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Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2002

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