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I'm liking this one, fancy a pint? Felinfoel? aka Feeling Fowl from my time in South Wales...Jaffa Cakes wrote: ↑Mon Jan 01, 2018 9:11 pmWhat I'm getting at is that if my father became a citizen in 1956 then he will not have had to register before I was born....which incidentally is before 1986 and any of the amendments that you're referring to.
Maybe next time I'm thereWanderer wrote: ↑Mon Jan 01, 2018 9:27 pmI'm liking this one, fancy a pint? Felinfoel? aka Feeling Fowl from my time in South Wales...Jaffa Cakes wrote: ↑Mon Jan 01, 2018 9:11 pmWhat I'm getting at is that if my father became a citizen in 1956 then he will not have had to register before I was born....which incidentally is before 1986 and any of the amendments that you're referring to.
Thankfully I don't think I have anything like that to contend with. But, I am concerned about being able to get some of the older documentation that I would need if this were to work out.
I agree - it's an interesting interpretation but I too can't help but feel something has subsequently changed in Irish law to block it.colint67 wrote: ↑Sat Jan 13, 2018 2:34 amHave you contacted anyone at the Department of Foreign Affairs about this? I was curious and read through the Act and it seems what you're saying is true, but realistically I can't imagine it would work out. In theory wouldn't that mean that basically everyone born prior to 1956 with any Irish ancestor at all would be an automatic citizen without having to register on the FBR? And would that mean that anybody who is a child or grandchild of those people would be eligible for citizenship under the current rules? Surely that can't be right.
7.—(1) Pending the re-integration of the national territory, subsection (1) of section 6 shall not apply to a person, not otherwise an Irish citizen, born in Northern Ireland on or after the 6th December, 1922, unless, in the prescribed manner, that person, if of full age, declares himself to be an Irish citizen or, if he is not of full age, his parent or guardian declares him to be an Irish citizen. In any such case, the subsection shall be deemed to apply to him from birth.
(2) Neither subsection (2) nor (4) of section 6 shall confer Irish citizenship on a person born outside Ireland if the father or mother through whom he derives citizenship was also born outside Ireland, unless—
(a) that person's birth is registered under section 27, or
(b) his father or mother, as the case may be, was at the time of his birth resident abroad in the public service.
27.—(1) A foreign births entry book shall be kept in every Irish diplomatic mission and consular office and a foreign births register shall be kept in the Department of External Affairs in Dublin.
(2) The birth outside Ireland of a person deriving citizenship through a father or mother born outside Ireland may be registered, in accordance with the foreign births regulations, either in any foreign births entry book or in the foreign births register, at the option of the person registering the birth.
(3) Particulars of all births entered in a foreign births entry book shall be transmitted, from time to time, in accordance with the foreign births regulations, to the Department of External Affairs for entry in the foreign births register.
(4) A document purporting to be a copy of an entry in a foreign births entry book or in the foreign births register, and to be duly authenticated, shall be admitted in evidence without proof of the signature or seal whereby it is authenticated or of the authority of the person whose signature or seal appears thereon and shall, until the contrary is proved, be deemed a true copy of the entry and accepted as proof of the fact and terms thereof.
(5) The Minister for External Affairs may make regulations (in this Act referred to as the foreign births regulations) respecting the form and manner of keeping of foreign births entry books and the foreign births register, the registration of births therein, the transmission of particulars of births from foreign births entry books for entry in the foreign births register, the inspection of the books and register by the public, the furnishing of extracts therefrom, and (with the consent of the Minister for Finance) the fees (if any) to be charged for registration of births in the books and register, for the inspection thereof and for furnishing extracts therefrom.