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If a child is born on a foreign airplane over the Pacific ocean and the mother is German and the father is French,and the plane is registered to Japan,what would be the nationality of the child.

2007-02-02 06:02:34 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

7 answers

German and French. The Japanese plane doesn't matter.

2007-02-02 06:05:30 · answer #1 · answered by wayfaroutthere 7 · 1 0

French and German due to the parents' nationalities. The child would be able to keep both nationalities (some countries require that at age 18, a child should decide, but this is not the case with France and Germany). Airspace doesn't matter.

A plane can be used to determine nationality in the highly unusual case that neither parent could transfer nationality to the child (i.e. a stateless man with a woman from a country where nationality is conferred thru the father). In such cases, a petition for nationality would have to be brought up in a national court and could go to a court of human rights (i.e. the European Court of Human Rights) for a determination. This is very rare but there have been cases of parents who couldn't pass their nationality for one reason or another and it resulted in a stateless child. There have been attempts to reduce statelessness so these court proceedings have built up precedent.

Since planes try to restrict travelling in the later stages in pregnancy, it's also unlikely that there would be a birth on board.

2007-02-02 13:15:21 · answer #2 · answered by elf2002 6 · 0 0

He would most likely have dual citizanship until he was 18 and then he'd have to decide. The plane doesn't matter and most countries, including Japan, do not give citizenship to foriegners actually born in their country, let alone on the airplane. The US is a bit strange that way.

2007-02-02 06:26:27 · answer #3 · answered by Love Shepherd 6 · 0 1

For ship it is the flag of the ship, but for airplane I am not sure, any how commercial airlines don not let you flight with more than 6 month of pregnancy so it is not likely to have a birth in a plane.

2007-02-02 06:08:57 · answer #4 · answered by runlolarun 4 · 0 0

No, it incredibly is not authentic. it incredibly is an city legend. merely like being born in a US embassy or on a US defense force base distant places does not make you a citizen the two. to not point out the reality that mom's in the final trimester are generally not allowed to fly long international flights and not employing a wellbeing care expert's letter and threat being despatched back on the port of get admission to.

2016-10-16 11:15:14 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

german and france have jus sanguinis thus the child has both these nationalities.

if japan has jus soli, the child is also a japanese national.

however, I believe pregnant women over 6 months aren't allowed to fly -- according to international regulations

2007-02-02 10:11:25 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The child would end up being German- like the mother.

2007-02-02 06:07:13 · answer #7 · answered by Hanz 2 · 0 1

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