Los Angeles Times

Britons keep EU access as dual citizens

Germany has seen a tripling of the number from United Kingdom applying for passports.

- By Erik Kirschbaum Kirschbaum is a special correspond­ent.

BERLIN — To Dale Carr, an English shopkeeper who moved to West Berlin 40 years ago, a surge in Britons seeking German citizenshi­p makes perfect sense even if it would have been difficult to imagine years ago.

Carr applied for German citizenshi­p after her compatriot­s narrowly voted in favor of Britain exiting from the 28-nation European Union in June 2016. Germany had become her home decades ago after she visited a friend and decided to stay.

“It’s a wonderful place to live,” Carr, 65, said in a recent interview. “And, unlike Britain, it’s inside the EU and staying there.”

Among the effects of Britain’s pending divorce from the EU, known as Brexit and expected to be complete in March, has been an increase in the numbers of Britons obtaining German passports. Although the numbers are modest for Germany, at fewer than 8,000 during the last year, they represent a tripling of such moves by the British to obtain citizenshi­p, a practice also happening in other European countries.

Analysts say more Britons living outside the United Kingdom are likely to obtain citizenshi­p in other countries — dual citizenshi­p is allowed in Germany — as the planned break becomes closer to reality. They will want to keep their ability to move and work freely within the European Union regardless of whatever arrangemen­ts Britain is able to negotiate with other countries, analysts say.

An estimated 100,000 British citizens live in Germany; about 1.2 million live in the 27 EU countries outside Britain.

“If I were British, I’d be trying to get a German passport or one from an EU country now too,” said Tanja Boerzel, a political science professor at Berlin’s Free University.

Boerzel said it is a shame that Britain, which fought valiantly during World War II to preserve democracy and values that were under siege by Nazi Germany, is preparing to leave the bloc of nations.

“Unfortunat­ely, that history of Britain fighting for these values got lost somewhere in the whole Brexit debate,” she said. “It was only about money and who pays whom which amounts. So if you ask me, it’s only the logical conclusion that it’s only material reasons now driving Brits to get German and EU passports. It fits.”

Germany’s federal statistics office announced last week that 7,493 Britons were naturalize­d in 2017.

Ostensibly, the still-modest numbers barely caused a ripple in a country of 82 million that includes about 10.6 million foreigners. But it was a nearly threefold increase from the 2,865 British nationals who obtained German citizenshi­p in 2016 and more than 10 times the number who did so in 2015 — 622.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has urged Britons to apply for German citizenshi­p to avoid disruption­s or uncertaint­ies in their lives after Brexit.

At a conference in Bavaria last year, a British entreprene­ur who built up a business with 20 employees in Germany over the last 25 years asked her whether he had to fear the German police knocking on his door at 6:30 a.m. one day to take him away.

“Maybe after living in Germany for 25 years it would be worth trying [to get a German passport] so that you’ll be on the safe side,” she said. “But I don’t think you need to worry about being shipped back to Birmingham.”

It is not particular­ly hard for Britons — or any other citizens of EU countries — to obtain citizenshi­p in Germany, which has the bloc’s dominant economy and a worsening shortage of skilled labor. Any EU citizens who have lived in Germany for eight years are eligible — provided they can prove they can speak German. Also eligible is anyone who has been married to a German for two years and has lived in Germany for three years.

“It’s ironic that [more than] 70 years ago Germany was the worst place on the Earth to be, a terrible country doing terrible things and yet now it’s one of the best countries there is to live in — and we all want to become German,” Carr said.

In some cases, a history of war and rivalry between Britain and Germany can make people uncomforta­ble about dual citizenshi­p or any other form of relationsh­ip, but that’s normally not what happens with Britons living in Germany, analysts and residents said.

“Yes, there’s still a lot of that kind of sentiment in the U.K.,” said Peter Rotheram, 50, a sound engineer from Britain who moved to Berlin 20 years ago to be with his girlfriend at the time and got his German passport recently.

“A friend of mine in the U.K. said he doesn’t like Germany and never wants to visit Germany because his grandfathe­r fought in the war and he thinks they’re aggressive and belligeren­t. He’s got this view of Germany and Germans, and it’s probably never going to change.”

Rotheram, however, said his point of view has changed during his time in Germany, including dropping some of the historical baggage.

“When I see a German flag flying now, I feel pride. It’s a great country,” he said. “Thanks to Germany, I’ve got a life in the EU now and can work wherever I want in the EU.”

Rotheram said that as much as he has become a fan of Germany’s powerful national soccer team, he still gets goosebumps whenever his beloved England team is playing.

“My heart is still English even though I’ve got a German passport,” he said. “When I first got here, I didn’t want Germany to win. But now, as long as they’re not playing England, I’ll be cheering for Germany. It’s my country now too.”

‘It’s a wonderful place to live. And, unlike Britain, it’s inside the EU and staying there.’ — Dale Carr, who moved to Germany from Britain 40 years ago and applied for dual citizenshi­p after the “Brexit” vote

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