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Unfortunatly no you are definatly not entitled to Irish citizenship. It ended with youre mother. I was in the exact same position and had to get citizenship through naturalisation.There would be no point obtaining the services of a lawyer as he/she will tell you exactly what I have.aussiegirrl wrote:Hi,
I am an Australian and my mother holds an Irish Passport (her grandmother was Irish born). She obtained her passport after I was born.
Do I qualify for Irish Citizenship? Should I find a lawyer or immigration specialist concerning this?
Any help would be appreciated.
Sincerely
aussiegirrl
aussiegirrl wrote:Hi,
I am an Australian and my mother holds an Irish Passport (her grandmother was Irish born). She obtained her passport after I was born.
Do I qualify for Irish Citizenship? Should I find a lawyer or immigration specialist concerning this?
Since 1 July 1986, a person registered in the Foreign Births Entry Book after 1986 is deemed to be an Irish citizen only from the date of his/her entry in the Register and not from the date of birth. This means that children born to that person before his/her date of entry in the Register are not entitled to citizenship.aussiegirrl wrote:Hi
Her FBR date is Nov 88. What does this mean?
Thank You
Aussiegirrl
aussiegirrl wrote:Hi
Her FBR date is Nov 88. What does this mean?