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I did call them as well .say same thing That they send me a letter in February and its in porcess.I applied in Feb 2012. work permit and then hosting agreement..stamp 4 now.blessed_sinner wrote:Just call INIS, they are still waiting for my reports. I applied in Dec 2011. They sent for reports in April 2012 and its still waiting.
When was it that you applied again?blessed_sinner wrote:I applied on the basis of 7 years on stamp 4 and I also have Irish suppose and an irish born child. still waiting. just loving it.
hopefully, you'll hear from them in 3 months timeblessed_sinner wrote:I applied in Dec 2011. received the confirmation in 2 working days. Asked me for copy of my renewed GNIB in Sept 2012 with passport validity.IntegratedMigrant wrote:When was it that you applied again?blessed_sinner wrote:I applied on the basis of 7 years on stamp 4 and I also have Irish suppose and an irish born child. still waiting. just loving it.
If I got you right, you applied based on 5 years residency and are married to an Irish national as well.
You should hear from them before the next ceremony after May
They sent for outside reports in April 2012 and still waiting.
My wife was on social benefit for much longer. I remember us going to a solicitor and the first thing he asked was if my wife was working and she said NO.And the solicitor told us her chances were next to none.yearofsnake wrote:Hello,everyone. If there were no social welfare has been cliam and did not work (no tax is paid) since i came to this country on 1997, will that affect applyig citizenship? I was 16 when i came to Ireland and spend two years in boarding school, after that i study in a language school and college for four year but never work becoz my boyfriend was backing me , then we got married on 2005 so that i grant spouse visa (stamp 3 ,not allow to work),my husband got his citizenship on 2009 so i convert my stamp3 to stamp4 on 2010, and we got divorced on 2012 Dec, but before divorced i was already working in a hotel for five months long, then quit it on Jan 2013, so basically i only paid five months tax to revenue office, i am worry if this wiil affect the decision from minister to grant me the citizenshio or not? Thanks very much!!
That is what I call a bad advice! (From your solicitor). As well as incompetent.Babz wrote:My wife was on social benefit for much longer. I remember us going to a solicitor and the first thing he asked was if my wife was working and she said NO.And the solicitor told us her chances were next to none.
But that didn't stop us putting in her application. She got her approval letter in just over 8 months. Her neighbor was in the same situation and she got hers last month.
No matter how immigrants may want that to happen, it will never happen. 99% of the government will vote against it.moro1 wrote:I hope Alan shatter changes the citizenship law so it becomes a right after 5 years as long as the applicant doesn't have criminal offences( apart from small traffic one) this way we can secure some continuity. Because If he leaves office w can end up going back to the same old attitude
Totally agree with you, I am sure by time things will change there is a new generation of new Irish citizens from migrant background who will push things toward improvementIntegratedMigrant wrote:No matter how immigrants may want that to happen, it will never happen. 99% of the government will vote against it.moro1 wrote:I hope Alan shatter changes the citizenship law so it becomes a right after 5 years as long as the applicant doesn't have criminal offences( apart from small traffic one) this way we can secure some continuity. Because If he leaves office w can end up going back to the same old attitude
What you are asking Alan Shatter to do is make citizenship an entitlement and not an honor and privilege. I know some countries have it this way but Irish people will never allow that.
What I believe Alan Shatter should change is waive all the conditions in which ones citizenship could be revoke except if obtained through fraudulent.
Most countries dont revoke citizenship except if obtained through fraudulent unlike Ireland!.
This is so daft that if you're a Naturalised Citizen and leave Ireland, you must be certifying a form every year and be sending it to the embassy of the country that you are residing or here in Ireland or your citizenship could be revoked. How ridiculous can that be!. Honestly I think its the stupidest thing I've ever seen.
That is very likely to happen but could take so many years. I would like it to happen in Alan Shatter's tenure. He will pay heed to that!moro1 wrote:Totally agree with you, I am sure by time things will change there is a new generation of new Irish citizens from migrant background who will push things toward improvement
I think 6 major ceremoniesAfrocommonwealth wrote:Can someone advise how many citizenship ceremonies were held last year pls?
Feb 2012Afrocommonwealth wrote:Also the months in between each ceremony? Finally, next ceremony in 2013 pls?
IntegratedMigrant wrote:Feb 2012Afrocommonwealth wrote:Also the months in between each ceremony? Finally, next ceremony in 2013 pls?
April 2012
June 2012
August 2012
October 2012
Dec 2012
Not 100% sure
Last ceremony was on 11th of March. Previous one on the 13th of December, and I think the one before was in the beginning of October.Afrocommonwealth wrote:Can someone advise how many citizenship ceremonies were held last year pls? Also the months in between each ceremony? Finally, next ceremony in 2013 pls?
Emailed INIS today to confirm if they have receive my payment and other documents. Got a reply within 3mins saying they have received it and l will be invited to the next available ceremony.
Thats for sure. Its not gonna be longer than that.Afrocommonwealth wrote:Thanks
Probably we should be expecting 2nd ceremony in 2013 by may or june. Hopefully.
Last year was every 2 months, this year has been very slow which takes 3 months.jeupsy wrote:Last ceremony was on 11th of March. Previous one on the 13th of December, and I think the one before was in the beginning of October.
So it is every 2-3 months ... The next one will probably be between mid-may and early June.
Yes exactly. The revocation for not registering is stupid and should be changed.IntegratedMigrant wrote:No matter how immigrants may want that to happen, it will never happen. 99% of the government will vote against it.moro1 wrote:I hope Alan shatter changes the citizenship law so it becomes a right after 5 years as long as the applicant doesn't have criminal offences( apart from small traffic one) this way we can secure some continuity. Because If he leaves office w can end up going back to the same old attitude
What you are asking Alan Shatter to do is make citizenship an entitlement and not an honor and privilege. I know some countries have it this way but Irish people will never allow that.
What I believe Alan Shatter should change is waive all the conditions in which ones citizenship could be revoke except if obtained through fraudulent.
Most countries dont revoke citizenship except if obtained through fraudulent unlike Ireland!.
This is so daft that if you're a Naturalised Citizen and leave Ireland, you must be certifying a form every year and be sending it to the embassy of the country that you are residing or here in Ireland or your citizenship could be revoked. How ridiculous can that be!. Honestly I think its the stupidest thing I've ever seen.
So for naturalised Irish citizens dont you think that should change fast? I mean most naturalised citizens are dual nationals. If they travel and live in their country of origin, what happens to their citizenship then?jeupsy wrote:Yes exactly. The revocation for not registering is stupid and should be changed.
Actually i have neither cliam any welfare nor engaged any employment.Babz wrote:My wife was on social benefit for much longer. I remember us going to a solicitor and the first thing he asked was if my wife was working and she said NO.And the solicitor told us her chances were next to none.yearofsnake wrote:Hello,everyone. If there were no social welfare has been cliam and did not work (no tax is paid) since i came to this country on 1997, will that affect applyig citizenship? I was 16 when i came to Ireland and spend two years in boarding school, after that i study in a language school and college for four year but never work becoz my boyfriend was backing me , then we got married on 2005 so that i grant spouse visa (stamp 3 ,not allow to work),my husband got his citizenship on 2009 so i convert my stamp3 to stamp4 on 2010, and we got divorced on 2012 Dec, but before divorced i was already working in a hotel for five months long, then quit it on Jan 2013, so basically i only paid five months tax to revenue office, i am worry if this wiil affect the decision from minister to grant me the citizenshio or not? Thanks very much!!
But that didn't stop us putting in her application. She got her approval letter in just over 8 months. Her neighbor was in the same situation and she got hers last month.
So far you can prove to them you are actively seeking employment (i.e proofs of job applications,responses from employers etc) that should be fine.
That's not saying it's easy though,bearing in mind everybody's case is different. It's worth giving it a try
Yes I definitely agree this doesn't make sense and should be changed ... Once you have granted citizenship to someone you shouldn't take it back unless the application was based on false documents or information - especially since some people would have to give up their previous citizenship to acquire the Irish one. That is also why I think granting citizenship shouldn't be an automatic entitlement after 5 years: I think once it is given it should be for life and therefore it is fair enough for the State to reserve the right not to grant it to some who isn't deemed to be of good character.IntegratedMigrant wrote: So for naturalised Irish citizens dont you think that should change fast? I mean most naturalised citizens are dual nationals. If they travel and live in their country of origin, what happens to their citizenship then?