cusser wrote: » Is it worth pursuing? If so, how? So far I have gotten by without...
cusser wrote: » I was born in Nigeria, 1963 in a bush hospital to Irish parents. My birth cert has always looked dodgy . It is (was) handwritten, on unofficial paper with date of birth crossed out and re-entered. I lost it 20 years ago, when my rugsack went missing at Milan airport. I have no photocopies. Somehow they, also have disappeared over the years. My main form of i.d. has been passport which I have to keep renewing for fear of having to go thru' drama regarding birth-cert. I tried ringing the Nigerian embassy, some years ago; asked if there was any hope of getting one re-issued. They said NO!...since the civil war etc...they would not have records. Is it worth pursuing? If so, how? So far I have gotten by without...
Under His Eye wrote: » There would be no need if both parents were Irish.
Mr. Incognito wrote: » If you have an Irish passport then they will have a record of your birth cert being submitted for the initial one. Ring them and ask for a copy.
GerardKeating wrote: » Assuming one or both parents are still alive, perhaps a signed/notirised affidavit of some kind, stating the circumstances of your birth. You must have given a copy of the birth cert to the DFA when you were first issues an irish passport, perhaps they still have a copy?
Glass fused light wrote: » Do you have an Irish passport or a Nigerian one? If its an Irish one or if your parents are Irish citizens contact your local register and explain the situation and they should be able to explain what you need to do to to have your birth registered as a child of Irish citizens.
Marcusm wrote: » Was your birth entered in the Foreign Births Register?
cusser wrote: » In which country?
Del2005 wrote: » Why do you want the Birth cert? You already have a passport which is acceptable ID for anything you need to apply. I don't know where my birth cert is and haven't needed to look for it in 20+ years.
longgonesilver wrote: » There is a saying about picking the time and place that you fight your battles. As above, first try to retrieve a copy from passport office of whoever holds the records. Then apply for a public services card. This will give you a second official form of id. In the past the biggest stumbling block for people without a birthcert has been proving their age when applying for the old age pension. By getting the public services card now you can explore the issue while you have access to a larger pool of people who can verify your story and age.
Irish citizens via naturalisation or Foreign Current Irish passport or Certificate of Naturalisation or Foreign Birth Registration certificate and Irish or UK driving
cusser wrote: » That was one of my queries; whether or not to pursue it? 'Other people' make me think I should, at times. That, and having returned to Ireland after many years living overseas, I am astounded at some of the bizarre red-tape scenarios people are subjected to here. Although I cannot logically think of a situation where I would need it over a passport, this is a crazy-ass country.:D
yenom wrote: » The passport office would shred all documents after something like twenty years due to data protection. They'd likely not have a record of it.
fxotoole wrote: » FBR only applies where your Irish born ascendant is a grandparent or where one of your parents got FBR before your birth.
longgonesilver wrote: » A photocopy can help verify that an original once existed. OP bush hospital Irish, Nigeria 1963. Who delivered you? Doctor, midwife? Who signed the original birth cert?
cusser wrote: » Don't know the answers to any of those questions. I discovered last week that my father actually wrote the birth cert, cos 'the fella' as he described him was illiterate!:(