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Under the Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act 1956 as amended, the Minister for Justice has the power to revoke a certificate of naturalisation where an individual has been ordinarily resident outside of the State for seven years after naturalisation, unless;
They have registered annually in the prescribed manner their name and a declaration of an intention to retain Irish citizenship with an Irish diplomatic mission or consular office or with the Minister.
If I recall it correctly, someone queried it and it was a very small number, if any.
Vadrar wrote: ↑Fri Aug 11, 2023 3:08 pmThe relevant parts of the Act were suspended a few years ago and I don't believe they've been re-instated (https://www.ihrec.ie/supreme-court-rule ... Commission) Happy to be corrected if they have indeed been re-instated. Doesn't mean it won't be re-instated at some point though, of course.
Worth noting even when they were in place, they didn't apply to those who've gained citizenship by descent or association.
I'm not sure anyone has been able to find a case where it was used when it was in place. However, I have heard about some cases where those seeking to have their children placed on the FBR, and as part of that process effectively declared they'd been overseas without registering it for the 7 years. A few approached up for help, but it is not our area at all ('our' means voluntary migrant support centre, we aren't lawyers). Those FB registrations appeared to have stalled as their non-registered absences of their parents were queried. I don't know the outcome - it's not the kind of issue our centre deals with and they were all referred to work through paid legal counsel.
Even though parts of the Act are suspended, the standard advice we are told to give is that annual registration is recommended if you move countries and have obtained your citizenship by residency/spouse. Those who've done it reported back to us that it wasn't onerous.
Yes, I agree - you'd likely need to keep annual registration up once started.sairsint wrote: ↑Fri Aug 11, 2023 3:23 pmVadrar wrote: ↑Fri Aug 11, 2023 3:08 pmThe relevant parts of the Act were suspended a few years ago and I don't believe they've been re-instated (https://www.ihrec.ie/supreme-court-rule ... Commission) Happy to be corrected if they have indeed been re-instated. Doesn't mean it won't be re-instated at some point though, of course.
Worth noting even when they were in place, they didn't apply to those who've gained citizenship by descent or association.
I'm not sure anyone has been able to find a case where it was used when it was in place. However, I have heard about some cases where those seeking to have their children placed on the FBR, and as part of that process effectively declared they'd been overseas without registering it for the 7 years. A few approached up for help, but it is not our area at all ('our' means voluntary migrant support centre, we aren't lawyers). Those FB registrations appeared to have stalled as their non-registered absences of their parents were queried. I don't know the outcome - it's not the kind of issue our centre deals with and they were all referred to work through paid legal counsel.
Even though parts of the Act are suspended, the standard advice we are told to give is that annual registration is recommended if you move countries and have obtained your citizenship by residency/spouse. Those who've done it reported back to us that it wasn't onerous.
I can see how it would be an issue if you were in this situation (living elsewhere and children needing Irish citizenship, etc.) but I don't see how they would know otherwise, outside of some criminal investigation, etc.
The thing about the annual form registration is that once you do it, you need to continue to do it every year. I'm not at all implying you should not follow the policy, but that I think it's one of those situations that once you start it, you can't really stop.
I doubt it was, but according to the link you gave, only sections (2) and (3) are legally suspended - and while there's no official procedure of revocation as of now, it's better to be safe than sorry. since 19(1)(c) still applies.Vadrar wrote: ↑Fri Aug 11, 2023 3:08 pmThe relevant parts of the Act were suspended a few years ago and I don't believe they've been re-instated (https://www.ihrec.ie/supreme-court-rule ... Commission) Happy to be corrected if they have indeed been re-instated. Doesn't mean it won't be re-instated at some point though, of course.
The consensus of the legal commentary around the suspension is that citizenship won't be revoked because of failure to register until the oversight of revocation decision making and appeal process is reformed and the relevant parts are re-instated. The judge presiding over the suspension clarified this exact issue in the recorded ruling when deciding which parts of the Act to suspend and which to leave in place.meself2 wrote: ↑Fri Aug 11, 2023 3:51 pmI doubt it was, but according to the link you gave, only sections (2) and (3) are legally suspended - and while there's no official procedure of revocation as of now, it's better to be safe than sorry. since 19(1)(c) still applies.Vadrar wrote: ↑Fri Aug 11, 2023 3:08 pmThe relevant parts of the Act were suspended a few years ago and I don't believe they've been re-instated (https://www.ihrec.ie/supreme-court-rule ... Commission) Happy to be corrected if they have indeed been re-instated. Doesn't mean it won't be re-instated at some point though, of course.
I have wondered whether this distinction between naturalised and non-naturalised citizens infringes upon my rights as a European citizen, as I don't seem to have quite the same rights to live freely within the rest of the EU.
Of course you can as you're an EU citizen. The problem here is that they have one standard for naturalised citizens and another for non-naturalised citizens which doesn't make any sense, regardless of birth rights. Irish citizens live all over the world, in fact I'd argue there's more of them living outside of Ireland than in it and I highly doubt many of those naturalised ones are all completing this form every year.