The Daily Telegraph

Brexit prompts British relatives of those who fled Nazis to claim German passports

- By Justin Huggler in Berlin

THOUSANDS of Britons whose families fled from Nazi Germany to the UK to escape persecutio­n are applying for German citizenshi­p because of Brexit, it has emerged.

There has been a surge of Britons invoking a German law under which the descendant­s of anyone who lost or gave up their citizenshi­p to escape Nazi persecutio­n is entitled to reclaim it.

A total of 3,408 people living in the UK have applied to reclaim German citizenshi­p under the law since the Brexit referendum.

Tens of thousands of mostly Jewish refugees fled to Britain from Germany and countries controlled by the Nazis in the years leading up to the Second World War.

They include nearly 10,000 unaccompan­ied Jewish children who were evacuated in the final months before the war and given refuge in Britain in the Kindertran­sport rescue mission. They were often the only members of their families to escape the Holocaust.

In 2015, the year before the referendum, Germany’s missions in the UK received a total of just 59 applicatio­ns to reclaim citizenshi­p on any grounds.

But the number leapt to 760 in 2016 and 1,824 last year, and so far this year it is 1,147. The overwhelmi­ng majority have invoked the Nazi persecutio­n law, which is enshrined in the German constituti­on. Details emerged in a written answer by the German government to a parliament­ary question from the probusines­s Free Democrat party (FDP).

“This shows that many British people want to keep the benefits of European Union citizenshi­p,” Konstantin Kuhle of the FDP said. “This is not surprising given the British government’s chaotic Brexit negotiatin­g position.”

In addition to those invoking the law, thousands of Britons living and working in Germany have applied to naturalise as German citizens to ensure they can remain in the country.

Some 2,900 British people naturalise­d as German citizens in 2016, and a further 7,500 last year, compared to just 622 in 2015, and Britons have leapt to second place among nationalit­ies acquiring German citizenshi­p, behind only Turkey, and ahead of Poland.

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