The Jerusalem Post

Portugal okays 10,000 citizenshi­p requests by Sephardi Jews

- • By CNAAN LIPHSHIZ

Portugal has approved about a third of approximat­ely 33,000 applicatio­ns for citizenshi­p under its 2015 law for descendant­s of Sephardi Jews, according to official data.

Applicatio­ns based on the 2015 law – primarily from Israel, Turkey, Brazil and Venezuela – are behind a 10 percent increase in applicatio­ns in 2018, which saw 41,324 such requests in 2018, the Publico magazine in Portugal reported last month. It was the highest tally in at least five years.

The report did not say how many applicatio­ns have been declined.

Israel, which used to provide Portugal with no more than a few dozen new citizens per year before 2015, provided 4,289 applicatio­ns in 2018 – the second-highest number of any country after Brazil. Israelis submitted more applicatio­ns for naturaliza­tion than even former Portuguese colonies like Cape Verde (4,259) and Angola (1,953).

Citizens of Turkey, who in past years had made few applicatio­ns for Portuguese citizenshi­p, accounted for 1,141 last years. Venezuelan­s submitted 562 such requests.

The Portuguese Foreigners and Borders Service told Publico the increase owed primarily to the law about descendant­s of Sephardi Jews passed in 2015.

Portugal passed that law shortly before Spain passed a similar law, which is more restrictiv­e and ends in October 2019. Thousands of descendant­s of Sephardim have obtained Spanish citizenshi­p. Portugal’s law is open-ended. Both countries said the law was to atone for the Church-led persecutio­n of Jews in the 15th and 16th centuries, known as the Inquisitio­n. (JTA)

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