Number of Britons granted citizenship in Germany quadruples
BERLIN — German authorities say the number of Britons granted German citizenship quadrupled last year as Britain voted to leave the European Union, though they were still only a small fraction of newly naturalized Germans.
BERLIN — German authorities say the number of Britons granted German citizenship quadrupled last year as Britain voted to leave the European Union, though they were still only a small fraction of newly naturalized Germans.
The Federal Statistical Office said Tuesday (June 13) that 2,865 Britons became German citizens in 2016. That’s 361 per cent more than in 2015 and the highest annual number yet measured for Britons.
Britons were, however, still a relatively small group. In all, 110,383 people were given German citizenship, a 2.9 per cent increase.
Turks were the biggest group, with 16,290 becoming German - a 17.3 per cent drop, following declines in previous years. Poles were the second-biggest, with 6,632.
Foreigners can apply for German citizenship after eight years’ residence. Nationals of other EU countries and Switzerland can keep their existing passports. AP