http://www.coe.int/t/e/legal_affairs/le ... 202003.pdf
Article 7. Ways of Acquiring Citizenship of the Republic of Lithuania
Citizenship of the Republic of Lithuania shall be acquired:
1) by birth;
ESC
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Article 7. Ways of Acquiring Citizenship of the Republic of Lithuania
Citizenship of the Republic of Lithuania shall be acquired:
1) by birth;
I don't think any EU country gives automatic citizenship based on birth. The last, I believe, was Ireland, in 2004 (or 2005?).Richard66 wrote:Does the following, taken from the Lithuanian nationality law, mean that a child born in Lithuania, regardless of its parent's citizenship, becomes a citizen of Lithuania?
http://www.coe.int/t/e/legal_affairs/le ... 202003.pdf
Article 7. Ways of Acquiring Citizenship of the Republic of Lithuania
Citizenship of the Republic of Lithuania shall be acquired:
1) by birth;
I have found this info about lithuanian citizenshipRichard66 wrote:I believe you are right, but the law is a bit confused.
Yes, we are trying desperately to get our child to have an EEA citizenship.
Yes I did take it from wiki. I think the best thing to do is, when your kid is born, go with his birth certificate and ask for a passport. Or you could now go to a solicitor and ask him to find the current text of the constituion, or you could go to libraries and find the current constituion/law.Richard66 wrote:You took this from Wikipedia, did you not? This article has been there for at least a year, so, I do not know...
Richard66 wrote:Does the following, taken from the Lithuanian nationality law, mean that a child born in Lithuania, regardless of its parent's citizenship, becomes a citizen of Lithuania?
http://www.coe.int/t/e/legal_affairs/le ... 202003.pdf
Article 7. Ways of Acquiring Citizenship of the Republic of Lithuania
Citizenship of the Republic of Lithuania shall be acquired:
1) by birth;
There are only three places in the EEA where your child will get a citizenship at birth, no questions asked (as you're British by descent) : Britain, Ireland, and Gibraltar. Plus the Isle of Man and Channel Islands. I am not aware of any others.Richard66 wrote:Well, thank you.
I am not currently in Lithuania, but I will go if that way our child can acquire an EU citizenship. You see, I am British by descent, while my wife is Russian and we live in Italy.
I think that to get a visa for your Russian wife, you'd need to provide evidence that you have been exercising Treaty rights in Italy and she is accompanying there as your family member. Of course, if she has a Residence Card for Italy (issued in accordance with the provisions of the Directive), she doesn't need a visa in theory (as you know!). But in practice..Richard66 wrote:Plus I do not need to show I am exercising treaty rights in Italy! Would they give a visa, do you think?
Maternity services (including birth) are free for all residents of Ireland. Remember that you and your wife become residents of Ireland the moment you set foot on the island, and have the right to reside for up to three months without any conditions or formalities imposed, other than the requirement to hold valid passports.Richard66 wrote:Would it be free for us, if we are not working there or would I need to be a jobseeker or employed?
Child would be an Irish citizen from birth as you are a British citizen. The Child would not be a British citizen if born in Ireland, since you are a British citizen by decent.Richard66 wrote:Would the child become Irish, would it be a British citizen or both?
If you are the non EEA spouse or the child (under 21 years) of an EU Citizen or the child of the non EEA spouse and wish to join/accompany the EU Citizen in Ireland the following documents are required:
* Application form.
* Passport.
* Marriage Certificate – evidence (apostilled document) that marriage has been registered in applicant’s country of origin/residence.
* Birth Certificate (long form) for children under 21 years, parental consent, national identity card (signed if required).
* Evidence that the EU Citizen spouse is exercising their EU Treaty Rights by being employed/self employed in the State or engaged in a valid vocational training programme or has sufficient financial resources and comprehensive sickness insurance cover.
Visits
If non EEA family members wish to accompany an EU Citizen on a visit to Ireland, or visit their EU family member who is residing in Ireland, all the documentation listed previously should be submitted in addition to
* Evidence that the applicant is accompanying the EU Citizen to Ireland – e.g. return airline/ferry tickets in both names
Or
* Evidence that the EU Citizen is already residing in Ireland