Citizenship and Passports - Who qualifies?
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Hi,
I have a question:
If my father has his Mauritian Citizenship and Passport by Naturalization (he was born in South Africa, his father was born in Mauritius-- ) He was granted his passport and became a citizen in 2011 do his children in anyway have the option to try obtain their citizenship / passport?
Thanks
Hello Gen5 and welcome to ½ûÂþÌìÌÃ
You may get citizenship. This issue has been discussed several times on the forum. I invite you to browse through the threads of our forum section :
Formalities and procedures in Mauritius
Threads such as this one may prove helpful : Mauritian Nationality by Descent
Regards
Kenjee
½ûÂþÌìÌÃ
Sorry it may not be applicable since the father became a naturalized citizen :
BY DESCENT
A person born outside Mauritius is a citizen of Mauritius under section 20(3) and 23 of the Constitution if either of his parents is a citizen of Mauritius by birth .
Best to check with the permanent secretary at the Ministry
Hello,
I happened across this and was hoping you could help please. My partner has a son who is a minor (5 years old) and he is of Mauritian descent by his father. My partner and the father were never married. Is the son eligible for Mauritian citizenship and if so is this something the father can obtain in the sons name. The father was born in Mauritius but moved abroad. Cheers.
Andrew
Hello,
This is a topic of great interest to me. My partner has a son whose father holds Mauritian citizenship but they were never married. The child is very young. Would the child be eligible for citizenship and a Mauritian passport? She is concerned that the father might get these things without her knowledge and essentially do a runner so to speak and leave the country for Mauritius. Please help if you can, she's very worried.
Andrew
please read the instructions on the PMO's website
Was that in reply to me? I have seen sources that say if the father is the citizen that the parents would have had to be married for the child to qualify for citizenship. However the link you gave me does not specify.
i know from my father.... his father was born in Mauritius, his mother was born in SA. He got his passport due to his father and under Naturalisation after the age of 21
He holds both a South African and Mauritian Passport and Citizenship in both countries.
Its a rather complex process which requires copies of BOTH parents ID's no matter what country each parent is from
I heard that the children would have to live in Mauritius for four years in order to qualify for citizenship ??
Well in this case her worry was he would do it for the child without her knowledge and use it as a way to essentially steal the child from her. Seems that isn't possible with both parents info and consent being required
AndersonDrew wrote:Well in this case her worry was he would do it for the child without her knowledge and use it as a way to essentially steal the child from her. Seems that isn't possible with both parents info and consent being required
With all due respect, pure poppycock !
No need for the child to gain Mauritian citizenship if the father decides ( with repercussion for sure) to take the child away from wherever they are presently living. It is how vigilant the authorities are when they fly out from a country ( a child with only one parent! ) . Normally at check-in and control they would ask for a letter from the absentee parent ( in this case the mother) to allow the father and child to travel from their place of residence.
Just read about all the stories about missing children from divorced parents.
I can help as I have personal experience. My wifes parents are both Mauritian by birth. My wife was therefore entitled to, and has obtained Mauritian citizenship, Mauritian passport and Mauritius ID card, even though my wife is British-born. Unfortunately even though my wife is a citizen, I am not entitled to citizenship, nor are our children because my wife is a naturalised citizen, not a birth citizen.
My Husband is Mauritian born and has lived in England for 42 years, I have been married to him for 40 years, my children have Mauritian passports and I have been told that I would have to live in Mauritius for six months before I would be allowed one, is this information correct? We holiday in Mauritius every year but can only stay four week-six weeks due to family commitments
Coral
I am married to a Mauritian guy and obtained residency 4 years ago.
We also own property in Mauritius.
I understand that I have to be resident for 4 years before I can apply for Mauritian citizenship.
It anyone knows any different that would be nice to know.
Coralamy wrote:My Husband is Mauritian born and has lived in England for 42 years, I have been married to him for 40 years, my children have Mauritian passports and I have been told that I would have to live in Mauritius for six months before I would be allowed one, is this information correct? We holiday in Mauritius every year but can only stay four week-six weeks due to family commitments
Coral
I believe you've been misled.
How can you get a Mauritian passport if you are not a Mauritian Citizen.
To become a citizen:
Matt1965 wrote:I can help as I have personal experience. My wifes parents are both Mauritian by birth. My wife was therefore entitled to, and has obtained Mauritian citizenship, Mauritian passport and Mauritius ID card, even though my wife is British-born. Unfortunately even though my wife is a citizen, I am not entitled to citizenship, nor are our children because my wife is a naturalised citizen, not a birth citizen.
After 5 years of residence on the island, you may try to get the citizenship:
Many Thanks for the replys,Â
I have just one last question, what kind of special circumstance are we looking at for a wife of 40years, married to a born Mauritian for her to obtain a passport if at present she is unable to live in Mauritius for 12 months?
Coral
Hi Coralamy,
I got my mauritian citizenship last year. I have been married with a mauritian and living on the island for 7 years. You have lo be here 4 x 365 days to apply for citizenship. Every time you leave the island they deduct those days.
Hope it helps,
Jessica
Coralamy wrote:Many Thanks for the replys,Â
I have just one last question, what kind of special circumstance are we looking at for a wife of 40years, married to a born Mauritian for her to obtain a passport if at present she is unable to live in Mauritius for 12 months?
Coral
To get a Mauritian passport , one has to be a Mauritian citizen and to become a citizen one has to reside on the island for 4 years ( or the equivalent of 4*365 days as explained above) with the spouse before applying to the PMO .
But how do i get permission to reside in Mauritius for 5 years in order to obtain citizenship? This is the bit I don't understand.
Matt1965 wrote:But how do i get permission to reside in Mauritius for 5 years in order to obtain citizenship? This is the bit I don't understand.
As a Commonwealth citizen
Huh ?? This makes no sense. Are you saying that because I am a Commonwealth citizen, I can just arrive at Mauritius airport with a one-way ticket and tell the immigration officer at the airport that I'm staying for 5 years even though I am a British citizen, with no Mauritian passport, no Mauritian i/d, and he will say " ok no problem?"
I don't think so !
Did you at least read what I posted in post #16 and click on the link to get you to that section instead of making silly scenario?
Please do read the information you are being provided - the agent at the airport is not the Minister and you have to have stayed on the island for a period of time.
you said your wife has got her citizenship didn't you ?
Surely its easier just to meet the 4 year residency of a spouse to apply for citizenship than the 5 year requirements listed under the Commonwealth scheme?
Also did I read correctly that is says in the latter that you must renounce your citizenship if applying that way? Quote:
<< Application for registration under section 5 of the Mauritius Citizenship Act shall be accompanied by a declaration of renunciation ,in the form set out at Appendix II, to the effect that applicant renounces any citizenship which he may possess >>
Simply apply for Residency and then after 4 years you can apply for citizenship?
Or am I missing something here?
daisymay2 wrote:Simply apply for Residency and then after 4 years you can apply for citizenship?
Or am I missing something here?
His wife got her citizenship by Jus sanguinis (Latin: right of blood)Â or commonly said "by descent" .
It is a principle of nationality law by which citizenship is not determined by place of birth but by having one or both parents who are citizens of the state.
Thus she can't transmit that privilege either to her spouse or to her children.
As far as renouncing one's citizenship - should check with the Ministry because they may have change the laws ( they did indeed change it for mauritians who took a second nationality at one point in time and then reverted back to being free to take another nationality )
Yes I did read your post no 16. Your post seemed to imply that because I am a Commonwealth citizen that I can turn up and live in Mauritius for 5 years just because my wife has citizenship. We have already been to the Immigration office in Port Louis to discuss this. I cannot just turn up and stay for 5 years.
Thats why I said your post makes no sense.
My Wife is Mauritian, and both her children  qualify for citizenship. As usual there are some for filling and it can take a couple of months for it to be finalised. ( Govt works slow here.)
Hi Matt. Saw your post about the citizenship. Do you and your children at any stage gain citizenship? Thanks Dean
I also heard that the PMO might decide not to grant YOU citizenship even after completing the 5yrs of your residency as a spouse of a mauritian citizen by birth.
clintonjay wrote:I also heard that the PMO might decide not to grant YOU citizenship even after completing the 5yrs of your residency as a spouse of a mauritian citizen by birth.
Yes, the PMO has the final say on anything regarding citizenship or even permanent residency.
Even if you qualify both regarding the number of years and the paperwork, your request might get turned down for a number of reasons like national security or if you have been convicted of a misdemeanor or if your your contribution to the country be it on any aspect (economic, social, diplomatic, etc) has been nil.
Also to be noted is that the PMO has the right to revoke any formally granted citizenship.
Hello @Gen I was wondering if you found out if this was possible. I am in the same situation.
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