By EUDO CITIZENSHIP expert Eugene Buttigieg
Among those who acquire citizenship by naturalisation, only a minority do so without any ties of marriage or parentage, according to statistics by the Maltese Parliament.
According to an article by the local newspaper Malta Today on Sunday, “few people get citizenship in Malta unless they marry a Maltese or have a Maltese parent’. Over 2,000 of the 2,817 new Maltese citizens in the last four years became Maltese citizens either by marriage or from birth to a Maltese parent.
Statistics show that since 2004, over 1,000 men and women married foreigners, who after five years of marriage became Maltese citizens. Foreign wives who gained citizenship mainly hailed from Britain (157), Australia (83), and Russia (55). Husbands mainly were of British (107), Australian (78), but also Italian (56) and Libyan origin (49). ‘The statistics presented in Parliament show that there is a significant gender imbalance in the acquisition of a Maltese citizenship. For example, just one of 16 Nigerians granted Maltese citizenship was a woman.
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