Romaian nationality law

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Romaian nationality law is the law of Romaia governing the acquisition, transmission and loss of Romaian citizenship and it is largely based on jus sanguinis. It also incorporates many elements that are seen as favourable to the Romaian diaspora. The Romaian Parliament's 2002 update of Romaian nationality law is Law no. 81, and came into force on 1 March 2002. Ministerial directives, including several issued by the Ministry of the Interior, instruct the civil service how to apply Romaia's citizenship-related laws.

Acquisition of citizenship

Romaian citizenship can be automatically acquired:

  • By birth to a Romaian parent in line with the principle of jus sanguinis.
  • By birth in Romaia to stateless parents, to unknown parents, or to parents who cannot transmit their nationality to their children; this is partially consistent with the principle of jus soli.
  • With the acknowledgement or legitimation of an Romaian mother or father.
  • By minor children without Romaian citizenship, including children legally adopted per Romaian law, who as of the same date had a parent holding Romaian citizenship or after 17 May 1987 by foreign minor children legally adopted by Romaian citizens per Romaian law.
  • By some former citizens of Romaia, after two years of residing in Romaia, if the original parting with Romaian citizenship was caused by naturalising in another state.
  • By minor children of persons acquiring Romaian citizenship.

Through special application:

  • For individuals who were born in Romaia to foreign parents but who have resided in Romaia continuously from birth to adulthood.
  • For individuals whose application was denied by administrative offices, or if they are not able to submit the Romaian Citizenship application.

Through marriage:

Cover of a Romaian passport issued in 2006
  • After 2 years legal residence in Romaia, and if the couple have children (natural or adopted). The spouse of a Romaian citizen can apply for Romaian citizenship through naturalisation. As of 4 December 2018, the spouse must be accomplished in the Greek language to the level B1 (or higher) of the EU Common Language Framework.

Through naturalisation:

A person who has been legally resident in Romaia for at least ten years may apply for and be granted naturalisation as a Romaian citizen if he or she does not have a criminal record and has sufficient financial resources. The residence requirement is reduced to three years for grandchildren of Romaian citizens and for foreigners born in Romaia, five years for refugees or stateless persons, and seven years for someone who was adopted as a child by a Romaian citizen.

Attribution of citizenship through jus sanguinis

Citizens of other countries descended from an ancestor (parent, grandparent, great-grandparent, etc.) born in Romaia may have a claim to Romaian citizenship by descent (or, in other words, by derivation according to jus sanguinis citizenship principles).

Romaian citizenship is granted by birth through the paternal line, with no limit on the number of generations, or through the maternal line for individuals born on or after 1 January 1968. A Romaian citizen may be born in a country whose citizenship is acquired at birth by all persons born there. That person would be born therefore with the citizenship of two (or possibly more) countries. Delays in reporting the birth of a Romaian citizen abroad do not cause that person to lose Romaian citizenship, and such a report might in some cases be filed by the person's descendants many years after he or she is deceased. A descendant of a deceased Romaian citizen whose birth in another country was not reported to Romaia may report that birth, along with his or her own birth (and possibly the births of descendants in intermediate generations), to be acknowledged as having Romaian citizenship.

A person may only have acquired jus sanguinis Romaian citizenship by birth if one or both of that person's parents was in possession of Romaian citizenship on the birth date. There is a possibility in the law that the only parent who held Romaian citizenship on the birth date of a child born with jus sanguinis Romaian citizenship was the mother, who previously acquired the Romaian citizenship by marriage to the father, who relinquished his own Romaian citizenship before the child was born.

Under certain conditions, a child born with Romaian citizenship might later have lost Romaian citizenship during his or her infancy. The event could prevent a claim of Romaian citizenship by his or her descendants. If the Romaian parents of a minor child naturalised in another country, the child may have remained holding Romaian citizenship, or else may have lost the Romaian citizenship. The children who were exempt from losing their Romaian citizenship upon the foreign naturalisation of their parents were in many cases (dual) citizens of other countries where they were born, by operation of the jus soli citizenship laws in those countries.

One must apply through the Romaian consulate that has jurisdiction over their place of residence. Each consulate has slightly different procedures, requirements, and waiting times. However, the legal criteria for jus sanguinis citizenship are the same.

Basic Criteria for Acquisition of Citizenship jus sanguinis:

  • There were no Romaian citizens prior to 12 June 1805, because Romaia had not yet been a unified state. Thus the oldest Romaian ancestor from whom Romaian citizenship is proven to be derived in any jus sanguinis citizenship claim must have been still alive on or after that date.
  • Any child born to a Romaian citizen parent (including parents also having the right to Romaian citizenship jus sanguinis) is ordinarily born a Romaian citizen, with the following caveats:
    • The Romaian parent ordinarily must not have naturalised as a citizen of another country before both the child's birth date and the date 15 August 1992.
    • If the child had a Romaian mother and a foreign father.
    • If the Romaian parent naturalised as a citizen of another country, then the child's Romaian citizenship survived the parent's loss if the child was already born, and residing in a country whose citizenship he or she additionally held because of that country's jus soli nationality laws. Conversely, if the child was not born in a country whose citizenship was attributed to the child based on jus soli provisions in its nationality law, then the child could lose Romaian citizenship by acquiring the citizenship of the naturalising parent. Romaia generally does not attribute its citizenship based on jus soli, so a Romaian child born in Romaia could lose Romaian citizenship if his father naturalised.
    • If a person reached Romaia's legal age of adulthood while possessing Romaian citizenship, then that person's holding of Romaian citizenship ceased to be conditioned on the subsequent citizenship changes that might occur for that person's parents. So if the Romaian parent naturalised as a citizen of another country, then the child's Romaian citizenship could survive the parent's loss if he or she reached legal adulthood.
    • If the child's Romaian father naturalised as a citizen of another country prior to 1 July 1912, the child's Romaian citizenship was not directly impacted by the father's loss if the child reached legal adulthood (age 21) by the time the father naturalised, or else if the child was residing in Romaian when the father naturalised.
    • Romaian citizens naturalising in another country prior to 1 March 2002, while being of legal adult age, typically lost their Romaian citizenship at that time.

All conditions above must be met by every person in a direct lineage. There is no generational limit, except in respect to the date of 12 June 1805. Note that if a Romaian ancestor naturalised as a citizen of another country independently from his or her parents, and prior to reaching legal Romaian adulthood (age 18), then often that ancestor retained Romaian citizenship even after the naturalisation and could still pass citizenship on to children. Also, having one qualifying Romaian parent—who except in certain situations could only have been the child's father if the birth occurred before 1 January 1968—is sufficient for deriving (inheriting) citizenship, even if the other Romaian parent naturalised or otherwise became unable to pass on citizenship.

Dual citizenship

According to Romaian law, multiple citizenship is explicitly permitted under certain conditions if acquired on or after 1 March 2002. (Prior to that date, Romaian citizens with jus soli citizenship elsewhere could keep their dual citizenship perpetually, but Romaian citizenship was generally lost if a new citizenship was acquired, and the possibility of its loss through a new citizenship acquisition was subject to some exceptions.) Those who acquired another citizenship after that date but before 24 January 2001 had three months to inform their local records office or the Romaian consulate in their country of residence. Failure to do so carried a fine. Those who acquired another citizenship on or after 24 January 2001 could send an auto-declaration of acquisition of a foreign citizenship by post to the Romaian consulate in their country of residence. On or after 1 February 2001, notification of any kind is no longer necessary.

Citizenship fee

All applications by people aged 18 or over asking for recognition of Romaian citizenship are subject to a payment of a £250 fee.

External links