Melbourne man ‘dumbfounded’ after finding out he lost Australian citizenship 33 years ago
2024/05/11 Leave a comment
Of note. What struck me the most was the speed of the government response, focussing on the essential, rather than process. But like in Canada, it took media interest to provoke a response:
Sometimes wonder Last month the 55-year-old was informed by Home Affairs that he had no Australian citizenship or visa, due to a law that was repealed more than 20 years ago.
When the father-of-two told his employer about the situation, he was initially stood down from work without pay.
“I’m no longer Australian and apparently I haven’t been for the last 33 years,” Mr Keogh told Raf Epstein on ABC Radio Melbourne Mornings.
“It’s not a situation I expected to find myself in. I’m mid-50s, I’ve paid my taxes … I’m very grateful to be Australian.”
Applying for Irish citizenship had unintended consequences
Mr Keogh’s grandparents were Irish and, proud of his ancestry, he decided to register his heritage with the Irish government when he was 22.
He didn’t understand that would automatically be treated as an application for Irish citizenship or, crucially, that he would immediately lose Australian citizenship as a result.
Mr Keogh received Irish citizenship and a passport, which he held alongside Australian identity documents which technically were not valid.
It was never flagged as a problem until he came forward late last year.
When Mr Keogh shared his story on ABC Radio Melbourne today, the office of the Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs, Andrew Giles, said they were looking into Mr Keogh’s case.
Three hours later his citizenship was restored.
He said he was “absolutely elated” to have his citizenship restored after going to the media, but the problem was not solved.
Source: Melbourne man ‘dumbfounded’ after finding out he lost Australian citizenship 33 years ago
