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Citizenship by Descent During the Second World War and afterwards,
many Lithuanian citizens emigrated because of its occupation by Germany
and the Soviet Union until it regained its independence from the latter
in 1990. Although basically a single citizenship country, in January 2003
it introduced new legislation that allows former citizens of Lithuania
who held its citizenship before 15 June 1940, their children, grandchildren
and great-grandchildren, to re-acquire their Lithuanian citizenship without
having to give up their existing citizenship. People who acquire Lithuanian
citizenship will also become European Union citizens in May 2004 when
Lithuania becomes a member of the EU. If you think you may be entitled
to Lithuanian citizenship through descent please
contact us for further information. Citizenship-by-Investment Although Lithuania does not have a specific Citizenship-by-Investment Programme, its legislation provides for the possibility of granting citizenship be means of naturalisation to people who have achieved particularly good results for the country in their work in science, economics, arts, culture, and sport in Lithuania, or who have invested a large sum of money in Lithuania which benefited the economy and created jobs in the country. There is no set amount of money that needs to be invested, so success depends upon the economic result and the number of jobs created. The normal requirements, including the renunciation of the applicant's existing citizenship, are not applied. Please contact us for further information and individual advice. Dual citizenship ruled unconstitutional The Lithuanian Constitutional Court has ruled in November 2006 that a number of provisions of the Law of the Republic of Lithuania on Citizenship are in conflict with the Lithuanian Constitution. In particular, the Constitutional Court has ruled that a number of current provisions of the Citizenship Law implicitly or explicitly allowing dual citizenship are in conflict with the Constitution; such provisions complemented to unconstitutional practice of making dual citizenship a common phenomenon rather than a rare exception. The provisions of the Citizenship Law announced unconstitutional are no longer valid and applicable to the extent stated by the Constitutional Court. Even though it appears that the Constitutional Court's ruling does not refer to the specific provisions regarding Citizenship-by-Investment, currently neither citizenship by descent nor Citizenship-by-Investment is possible. |