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Are you in Ireland and did you apply here directly? I am the same as you and I applied on the basis of being a naturalised irish citizen for my child eventhough her grandad was born and raise in Ireland, and father was an irish citizen by descent. I applied 3 weeks ago and havent heard frombluemoon2 wrote: ↑Sat Dec 09, 2017 2:38 pmGot citizenship on the base of 5 year residency in 2013.
Child was born in Pakistan in 2015.
myself and the mother of child are married .
They asked for 3 proof of address for child which we sent promptly .
Application was submitted in Karachi January 2017.
FBR section definitely being bias now about naturalized Irish citizens even they say we have the same right like other Irish born citizens but I don,t believe it now .
1.Reasons for the basis of 5-year residency?bluemoon2 wrote: ↑Sat Dec 09, 2017 2:38 pmGot citizenship on the base of 5 year residency in 2013.
Child was born in Pakistan in 2015.
myself and the mother of child are married .
They asked for 3 proof of address for child which we sent promptly .
Application was submitted in Karachi January 2017.
FBR section definitely being bias now about naturalized Irish citizens even they say we have the same right like other Irish born citizens but I don,t believe it now .
I guess so. But I did apply as a naturalized irish parent. As i find it easier for the requirements to complete compared if she apply through his dad and grandad. Loads of things that u need her grandads birth cert, copy of passport etc.bluemoon2 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 11, 2017 11:55 pmMy wife applied from Pakistan as it has to be applied from the country where mother is living with baby , I live in Ireland but my wife lives in Pakistan with baby , but don,t worry you will get your very soon as your baby,s granddad was born in Ireland , they are only making hell for children whose parents are only naturalized Citizens which is not in your case. Best Of Luck.
The first email i had they answered after 2 days. And when i replied i got an answer after an hour only.
My intention is not to be rude so my apologies if you feel offended, I'm just trying to share my views from someone seeing your personal situation from the outside and no bias at all.bluemoon2 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2017 2:21 pm1- Came to Ireland in 2004 with my Spanish wife from Spain under Eu treaty rights visa.
2- Divorced from Spanish wife in 2012.
3- Married in Pakistan in 2015.
4- Sorry Meant to type baby was born in 2016 and not in 2015 , was born in November 2016 and applied for fbr in January 2017 around 10 weeks after birth.
5. Yes was married with baby,s mother at the time of birth.
Hi Max307 ,max307 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 7:09 pmMy intention is not to be rude so my apologies if you feel offended, I'm just trying to share my views from someone seeing your personal situation from the outside and no bias at all.bluemoon2 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2017 2:21 pm1- Came to Ireland in 2004 with my Spanish wife from Spain under Eu treaty rights visa.
2- Divorced from Spanish wife in 2012.
3- Married in Pakistan in 2015.
4- Sorry Meant to type baby was born in 2016 and not in 2015 , was born in November 2016 and applied for fbr in January 2017 around 10 weeks after birth.
5. Yes was married with baby,s mother at the time of birth.
First of all I do disagree with a bias within DFA, several others here in the forum have applied for FBR with no issues. I think (my personal view) the issue with your application for FBR is that the DFA is looking at your history in the country and the circumstances in which you were awarded Irish citizenship.
As per your recollection, you were naturalised in 2013 which means that it’s highly likely that your application for citizenship was lodged before/during your divorce proceedings since you mentioned the divorce to the EU citizen occurred in 2012, right? Divorces in the EU tend to be long processes so if you divorced in 2012 the proceedings started when exactly?
Did you notify INIS about your divorce? Did you apply for retention of rights after the divorce or did you apply for citizenship on the basis of marriage to an EU citizen and residence in the country for 5 years?
Glad to hear that your process to apply for retention of rights and citizenship was straightforward, we can discard that as the reason why your application for FBR is taking this long.bluemoon2 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 27, 2018 10:53 amAnd despite of this . if dfa still have reservations / objections about application , why don,t they reject it ? whats the point of keep you hanging in the air for 2 years and still keep saying how long it will take ?
I do not insist on a outcome in favor of me , I just want them to produce an outcome
Yes , As far as I understand there shouldn,t be any issue with my naturalization as I told earlier first I got retention rights approval with 10 years residency then I got my citizenship .max307 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 27, 2018 2:21 pmGlad to hear that your process to apply for retention of rights and citizenship was straightforward, we can discard that as the reason why your application for FBR is taking this long.bluemoon2 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 27, 2018 10:53 amAnd despite of this . if dfa still have reservations / objections about application , why don,t they reject it ? whats the point of keep you hanging in the air for 2 years and still keep saying how long it will take ?
I do not insist on a outcome in favor of me , I just want them to produce an outcome
I’m afraid I can’t answer those questions for you and actually surprised a simple process like FBR is taking almost 2 years. I honestly thought they had issues with your naturalisation but it sounds like you did everything as you were supposed to so at this point I don’t know.
Can you appeal to the minister at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade or any other government body in Ireland?
@ euspouse07 , Dear if you are not agree with me about discrimination of dfa then its your own opinion and you have every right of it and to express it , but I strongly believe it , obviously dfa do not express it openly as discrimination is crime is Ireland so their policy is say nothing but do whatever you want to do and why I am saying that ? because Actions Speak Louder Than Words and their actions are telling the story if someone want to listen it .euspouse07 wrote: ↑Tue Jul 31, 2018 12:06 pmDear Friend
I beg to differ about your opinion of discrimination while treating with NON-WHITE Irish.
It can not be totally ruled out but one can paint the whole system with the same brush.
I urge you to look for solution, not the problem. You can ask for the copy of your and your's child's file under the FOI.U have left it too loose for too long.
Please note citizenship is a privilege. Rights have given under naturalized citizenship and Eu treaty are not absolute.
I hope this will help