terri
10 Jul 2009
Law / Dual citizen non-Polish resident studying in Poland [14]
>>>Get an official odpis of your Polish birth certificate and you've eliminated a whole bunch of headaches. ...I already have my Polish birth certificate, written in Polish.
>>>Not recognising dual citizenship means that a dual-national can't claim to be (e.g. British) when he/she gets in trouble (e.g. with the police) or has to deal with some form of official bureaucracy - the Poles consider you as Polish only and treat you as they would any other Pole.
...I'm sorry, they just CANNOT pull that one, you cannot treat me as Polish (when I get into trouble), but not Polish when it comes to recognizing the entitlement to my citizenship. I'm either Polish or I'm not, if I am I have the right to a dowod/passport, if I'm not then I'm British and if I get into trouble I'm British.
Just out of interest I will get round to solving this - I have tried before, (in 2002/3 at a cost over 6,000 PLN and still got nowhere)
>>>Get an official odpis of your Polish birth certificate and you've eliminated a whole bunch of headaches. ...I already have my Polish birth certificate, written in Polish.
>>>Not recognising dual citizenship means that a dual-national can't claim to be (e.g. British) when he/she gets in trouble (e.g. with the police) or has to deal with some form of official bureaucracy - the Poles consider you as Polish only and treat you as they would any other Pole.
...I'm sorry, they just CANNOT pull that one, you cannot treat me as Polish (when I get into trouble), but not Polish when it comes to recognizing the entitlement to my citizenship. I'm either Polish or I'm not, if I am I have the right to a dowod/passport, if I'm not then I'm British and if I get into trouble I'm British.
Just out of interest I will get round to solving this - I have tried before, (in 2002/3 at a cost over 6,000 PLN and still got nowhere)