T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1333.1 | It's WHO you know, rather than WHAT you know. | HILL16::BURNS | ANCL�R | Fri Feb 18 1994 15:18 | 15 |
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The Irish Consulate is located on 555 Boylston Street in Boston,
right across the street from Copley Square. The phone number is
617.267.9330 I'm sure they can answer all your questions.
From experience I can tell you that the process is long and
complicated. I think Mr Darcy has a few war stories or two also.
I was sucessful in obtaining an Irish passport but it is not something
that I would want to go thru on a regular basis.
keVin
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1333.2 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Back on the nest | Mon Feb 21 1994 07:42 | 16 |
| As I recall, officially he must have a grandparent born in Ireland. To
help his case, his father should apply for a passport, and then register
your friend as a foreign birth. Until that happens, no chance.
I was told by the Irish embassy here in Brussels, that my children have
the right to a passport through my mother not me, and that they must
become Irish by Declaration/Naturalisation for their children to become
so. In any event, I am required to register them as Foreign Births in
order that they can have a passport at all.
Furhter, I understand that things have tightened up considerably after
a) Irish passprts were severely devalued by that bloke in London who
was selling them off a couple of years ago, and b) the new EC
immigration laws that came into effect on 1st Jan 1994
Laurie.
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1333.3 | Ollie North used them too | CTHQ::COADY | | Mon Feb 21 1994 08:24 | 4 |
|
Yeah, As Mr Burns pointed out to me, Ollie North used them during the
famous Contra situ here in the USA and this has also added some
difficulty tothe process.
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1333.4 | How about Irish passport thru marriage to an Irish citizen | CTHQ::COADY | | Mon Feb 21 1994 08:28 | 13 |
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By the way, a related question - has noter (or their spouse) got their
Irish passport through marriage to an Irish citizen. My wife is
considering this path, but she said that when she checked about 2 years
ago she was told we had to be married 5 years - no way around this.
That seem crazy, even the US dept of INS is that bad.
Anyone have any insights into this ?
PS
( I'm not trying to get into the "passport wholesale" busines )
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1333.5 | | FORTY2::DONOVAN | | Mon Feb 21 1994 08:45 | 30 |
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Hello Gerry, I know someone who used to work in the consulate
a few years back (not in the USA, but the Irish citizenship rules
apply the same in all countries). Here is what she reckons:
- If you were born in Ireland (Republic or the six counties), you
are Irish and can get a passport as long as you have a birth
certificate.
- If one or more of your parents was born in Ireland (again,
North or South does not come into it), you are also considered to
have Irish citizenship, and can get a passport as long as you
have a birth certificate, your parents' birth certificates, and
their marriage certificate (if only your mother was Irish born).
What you do if your parents weren't married isn't clear.
- If your Grandpparents were Irish born, you can obtain Irish
citizenship by getting the relevant birth and marriage
certificates, and paying a registration fee (the details on this
were a bit sketchy). Once you are registered you can get a
passport.
- If your Great Grandparents were Irish born, you are out of
luck, and cannot obtain Irish citizenship. The only exception to
this is if you are any good at football (goalkeepers and strikers
preferred, apply before June 1994 to avoid disappointment - Packy
Bonnar can't even make the Celtic first team at the moment, and
Niall Quinn is out till next season !).
John
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1333.6 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Mon Feb 21 1994 09:38 | 13 |
| >1) Can his father claim Irish ancestor as his grand-parents came from Ireland ?
>2) Can he then claim if (when) his father is successful in his application ?
Unfortunately, grandchildren of Irish-born natives cannot pass
citizenship (once obtained via Foreign Births) to their children.
This was enacted sometime around 1980.
I don't know if it's possible (or common) to obtain Irish citizenship
simply by living in Ireland for a certain number of years. This would
be another alternative I suppose. Anyone know?
/g
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1333.7 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Feb 21 1994 11:13 | 9 |
| RE: .2 by PLAYER::BROWNL
>Furhter, I understand that things have tightened up considerably after
>a) Irish passprts were severely devalued by that bloke in London who
>was selling them off a couple of years ago, and b) the new EC
>immigration laws that came into effect on 1st Jan 1994
Could you please elaborate on "b)" Laurie?
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1333.8 | sold them for 3000 punts or so (if I recall) | CTHQ::COADY | | Mon Feb 21 1994 13:41 | 8 |
|
If I recall, a senior official in the Irish embassy in London was
"selling" Irish passports to people to allow them into Ireland and UK (
as we don't have a visa need).
It was someway linked to arranged marriages etc - he made a lot of
money, but got caught when an audit (i think) noticed some very strange
sounding Irish names :=).
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1333.9 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Feb 21 1994 15:39 | 9 |
| RE: .8 by CTHQ::COADY
>If I recall, a senior official in the Irish embassy in London was
>"selling" Irish passports to people to allow them into Ireland and UK (
>as we don't have a visa need).
No, no, I wasn't asking about that. I was asking about point B,
changes in EC immigration laws.
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1333.10 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Back on the nest | Tue Feb 22 1994 09:06 | 21 |
| Denis,
The EC has magically transformed itself into a "Union". A consequence
of this is internal open borders: in theory at least... Anyway, a
consequence of this, is that all the member states have become very
jittery about entry to the community; some have become *very* jittery.
The main reason for this, is that an EC citizen has the right to live
and work in *any* EC country. So, if an Irish passport is "easy" to
obtain, therein lies a back door to life in say, Germany or France, two
countries struggling with illegal immigration problems.
Therefore, as part of the accord to "open" borders, each member country
has had to agree to tighten up such things as passport issuance and
external (to the community) border controls. In Ireland's case, stuff
like Ollie North, and that bloke flogging them off for 3000 punt each,
has made things stand out a little more, and as a consequence, Ireland
is being more careful to be seen as whiter than white. This last is
parphrased from a recent conversation with the Irish Embassy in
Brussels.
Laurie.
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1333.11 | RE: .10 | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Feb 22 1994 11:00 | 2 |
| Yes, Laurie, but what "change" took effect on 1 January 1994?
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1333.12 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Back on the nest | Tue Feb 22 1994 13:47 | 3 |
| The European Union came into being.
Laurie.
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1333.13 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Feb 22 1994 16:38 | 13 |
| RE: .12 by PLAYER::BROWNL
>The European Union came into being.
I guess I'm not making my question clear, Laurie. Before the EC
officially came into being, a person whose grandparent was born in
Ireland could claim Irish citizenship.
Has the Irish government changed this requirement subsequent to 1-Jan.?
Has the EC changed the rules by which citizens of one member nation can
work and reside in another member nation, or pass between borders?
|
1333.14 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Back on the nest | Wed Feb 23 1994 04:43 | 6 |
| Ah! I see!
No. not as far as I'm aware. However, as I said, member countries are
now taking more care to see their individual rules aren't broken.
Laurie.
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1333.15 | update #1 | CTHQ::COADY | | Mon Mar 14 1994 10:34 | 19 |
|
Just an update;
Its almost impossible to get the Irish passport via ancestors unles you
have all the paperwork going back to the birth certs of the people who
were born in Ireland. In the case I mentioned that is impossible
(almost) as the guy doesn't even know what county his ancestors are
from.
Also, as was pointed out earlier, even if his Dad gets Irish
citizenship, he can;t pass it on as he i getting it from
grand-parents(or something like that).
As to passport as a result of marriage. It has to be a mimimum of 3
years and requires a significant amount of paperwork, not unlike the US
INS process. It can take 6-9 months after application.
This is info is based on long and tedious converstations with a
non-helpful member of the Irish consulate in Boston.
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1333.16 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Mon Mar 14 1994 11:15 | 4 |
| Having dealt with them before, those consulate people do have a bad
attitude. Very un-Irish isn't it? I don't know what their problem is.
I would be thrilled to have a job such as theirs, being able to see
the world and get paid for it! They're certainly not from Cork. ;v)
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1333.17 | maybe th ejob is boring | CTHQ::COADY | | Mon Mar 14 1994 11:21 | 11 |
|
The lady I spoke on all 3 occasions was definitely Irish and my guess
is she had a Dublin city accent.
In fact on 3rd occassion she asked me not to call her back unless I had
more specifics that it was not her job to answer "hypothetical" or
non-specific questions.
I suppose most admin jobs do end up boring after an extended period ...
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1333.18 | The Family Secret | TINCUP::AGUE | DTN-592-4939, 719-598-3498(SSL) | Mon Mar 14 1994 21:26 | 26 |
| My wife recently went through the process. It took about 9 months of
waiting on paperwork processing.
Along the way we uncovered a family secret kept to her death by her
paternal grandmother.
Both of Rita's paternal grandparents were born in Ireland and Irish
citizens. For Rita to get her Irish citizenship, she had to prove
Irish lineage, which required five documents:
birth certificate of one of the grandparents,
marriage certificate of her grandparents,
birth certificate of one of their offspring, her dad,
marraige certificate of her parents, and
her own birth certificate.
Comparison of the first two documents showed that her grandmother had
"trimmed" five years off her age between the time she was born and the
time she was married:
"How old are ye, gal?"
"Oh, I'm just a young, ah, 23!"
Then by the time she had Rita's dad, she "trimmed" another 2 years off.
-- Jim
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1333.19 | Any more details on implications of this? | CTHQ::COADY | | Mon Jan 09 1995 13:33 | 9 |
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The Government has resurrected the "passports-for-sale" controversy.
Last summer there was a row over Irish passports being issued to a
Middle-East family which invested in C&D Petfoods, the company owned
by the family of former Taoiseach Albert Reynolds. This led to new
procedures for the issuing of passports being introduced. Minister
for Justice Nora Owen has now promised a further review of the
procedures.
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