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Canadian Citizenship for Baby and Korean Law of Blood
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phaedrus



Joined: 13 Nov 2003
Location: I'm comin' to get ya.

PostPosted: Fri Dec 10, 2004 4:09 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The latest word I got is that I just register the birth with the Canadian Consulate and acquire Canadian citizenship for the baby, and then go to Korean Immigration to do alien registration, and the baby will only be Canadian.

The Consulate said that if I don't register the birth with any Korean office the baby will not acquire Korean citizenship.

I don't like the passive approach, though. I want them to be certain that the baby will not have Korean citizenship.

I think that dual citizenship for any amount of time with a country that does not recognize dual citizenship after the age of 18 is a useless thing to have. Especially since the baby will be half Canadian, and Korea discriminates against foreigners.
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casey's moon



Joined: 14 Sep 2004
Location: Daejeon

PostPosted: Fri Dec 10, 2004 5:05 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

phaedrus wrote:
The latest word I got is that I just register the birth with the Canadian Consulate and acquire Canadian citizenship for the baby, and then go to Korean Immigration to do alien registration, and the baby will only be Canadian.

The Consulate said that if I don't register the birth with any Korean office the baby will not acquire Korean citizenship.

I don't like the passive approach, though. I want them to be certain that the baby will not have Korean citizenship.

I think that dual citizenship for any amount of time with a country that does not recognize dual citizenship after the age of 18 is a useless thing to have. Especially since the baby will be half Canadian, and Korea discriminates against foreigners.


Are you sure you've thought this through completely? The dual citizenship thing may be a gift you're denying your child, especially if you plan to stay in Korea for more than another year or two. Even if you DON'T plan to, you may find yourself regretting taking away his Korean citizenship. I know an American/Korean couple who all only have American citizenship, and now that they are living in Korea and plan to stay, totally regret that decision.

As for military service, I understand that mixed blood children don't have to do military service, and possibly can't do military service even if they wanted to. Obviously my husband and I will be looking into this in more detail before we start baby making -- but this is the information he found out when he started inquiring last year.

Anyway, I'm not trying to say you're making a mistake -- I'm just having trouble grasping why you're so against Korean citizenship, when the benefits seem to outweigh the tiny tiny possibility of something going wrong. Perhaps you're speaking from an experience that I don't share.

I've seen your queries related to parenthood in the past, and I'm sure whatever choice you make will be the best one, as you obviously care about your little guy a lot!
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phaedrus



Joined: 13 Nov 2003
Location: I'm comin' to get ya.

PostPosted: Fri Dec 10, 2004 5:42 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

casey's moon wrote:
phaedrus wrote:
The latest word I got is that I just register the birth with the Canadian Consulate and acquire Canadian citizenship for the baby, and then go to Korean Immigration to do alien registration, and the baby will only be Canadian.

The Consulate said that if I don't register the birth with any Korean office the baby will not acquire Korean citizenship.

I don't like the passive approach, though. I want them to be certain that the baby will not have Korean citizenship.

I think that dual citizenship for any amount of time with a country that does not recognize dual citizenship after the age of 18 is a useless thing to have. Especially since the baby will be half Canadian, and Korea discriminates against foreigners.




Are you sure you've thought this through completely? The dual citizenship thing may be a gift you're denying your child, especially if you plan to stay in Korea for more than another year or two. Even if you DON'T plan to, you may find yourself regretting taking away his Korean citizenship. I know an American/Korean couple who all only have American citizenship, and now that they are living in Korea and plan to stay, totally regret that decision.

As for military service, I understand that mixed blood children don't have to do military service, and possibly can't do military service even if they wanted to. Obviously my husband and I will be looking into this in more detail before we start baby making -- but this is the information he found out when he started inquiring last year.

Anyway, I'm not trying to say you're making a mistake -- I'm just having trouble grasping why you're so against Korean citizenship, when the benefits seem to outweigh the tiny tiny possibility of something going wrong. Perhaps you're speaking from an experience that I don't share.

I've seen your queries related to parenthood in the past, and I'm sure whatever choice you make will be the best one, as you obviously care about your little guy a lot!


Thank you for your insightful post.

Of course for everything I have no idea. I wish there was a book titled "Answers for Phaedrus". It doesn't help that I think like a lawyer.

My best shot is to approach every issue from the extreme and settle into a happy solution through action and discussion.
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toomuchtime



Joined: 11 May 2003
Location: the only country with four distinct seasons

PostPosted: Fri Dec 10, 2004 6:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have to second Casey's Moon's comments.
I understand your instinctive desire to have no ties, legal or otherwise, binding your child to Korea, but as CM said, it may be a decision you will regret later. Why the rush? Nothing bad can happen until the boy is 18, and as someone else said, mixed kids may not even be elligible for military service. Like it or not, you kid is half Korean- that might become a very important fact in your child's life as he tries to define who he is when he gets older. Wait until he's a teenager, and have a talk with him about it. Give him a say.
Just my opinion.

Good luck with whatever you decide.
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canadian_in_korea



Joined: 20 Jun 2004
Location: South Korea

PostPosted: Sun Dec 12, 2004 12:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

My husband and I were just discussing this.....he said he does not want to register a son (if we have one) on his korean family registry....of course there is the downside that he won't be on a korean registry...but he really doesn't want his children to have to complete military service....maybe they won't have to because they will be half canadian, but I don't think he wants to take any chances. Perhaps some korean men don't feel that way...maybe it depends on their personal experience in the military.
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