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The number of countries that allow dual citizenship, either de jure or de facto, is on the increase. Given time, it may be that the country of your roots may offer it, in the fullness of time.
Good point, I think that's fair enough.fwd079 wrote:Difference is you are a Royal subject after Naturalisation as British Citizen, so if queen asks you to jump you ask how high other than that, you have to follow all rules UK introduces before, on or after the day you became citizen.
Thank you so much for your reply @secret.simon!secret.simon wrote:Thankfully the Queen is not that foolish. In any case, she would not pass any orders except on advice of her ministers. So as long as you can trust her ministers, you are safe.
About my comments about de jure and de facto dual citizenships, some countries explicitly allow multiple citizenships in their laws. That is de jure citizenship.
In other countries (such as the US), the laws do not forbid holding another citizenship but they ignore a dual citizen's other nationality in their country. So, for instance, in the US citizenship oath, you explicitly renounce allegiance to any foreign prince or potentate. Multiple citizenship is not forbidden, but can not be exercised within the US. That is de facto dual citizenship.
Hope that it helps.