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Germany eases citizen rules for WW2 refugee descendants

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Jacqueline Boronow-Danson as a baby with her parents
Image caption,

Jacqueline Boronow-Danson (C) said she had been turned down for citizenship because she was adopted

Germany has enforced two decrees to help families of people who fled the Nazis to take up German citizenship, after a challenge by British descendants of Jewish refugees.

Although anyone deprived of citizenship by the Nazis is entitled to have it restored, hundreds of applicants have fallen foul of exemptions in the law.

Germany's interior minister said it had to live up to its responsibilities.

The UK's planned exit from the EU has led to an increase in applications.

As recently as 2015, only 43 descendants of Nazi refugees had applied for German citizenship, but that number swelled to 1,506 in 2018. Most, but not all, are of Jewish heritage.

Why did Germany turn people down?

Earlier this month, the ´óÏó´«Ã½ spoke to several people who had fought for German citizenship for years.

Sally Morgan said she had been rejected because her request was based on her mother being German, and not her father. For years, a child born to a married couple could only apply if their father was German, not their mother. The law was changed but only dated back to 1953.

Jacqueline Boronow-Danson had tried for five years to obtain citizenship but said she had been turned down as she was adopted.

Under , anyone who had their citizenship taken away during the 12 years of Nazi rule from 30 January 1933 to 8 May 1945 "on political, racial, or religious grounds may have their citizenship restored".

But there were several exclusions. Some applicants were turned down because they had lost their citizenship before officially having it removed by the Nazis under the Reich Citizens Act of 25 November 1941.

What has changed?

Two interior ministry decrees have come into effect that now mean descendants of women who lost their citizenship are eligible for restoration as well as children whose parents were unmarried when they were born.

Media caption,

What Brexit, freedom of movement and citizenship mean to three people living in Berlin

"Germany must live up to its historical responsibility towards descendants of German victims of National Socialist persecution who have been deprived of citizenship rights," said Interior Minister Horst Seehofer. "This applies particularly to those whose parents or grandparents were forced to flee abroad."

Descendants from the second, third and fourth generation, and ", the interior ministry said.

Requirements would be reduced to a minimum, including a basic level of German and a basic knowledge of Germany's "legal and social order", the ministry added.

A spokesman for the Article 116 Exclusions Group, Nicholas Courtman, said that while the decrees were a first step, a change in the law was necessary to guarantee all descendants their rights.

"The federal government's refusal to consider a legislative change is regrettable, especially in light of the fact that this decree can only be used from abroad and is of no use to those descendants currently living in Germany," he said.