Well Done Brian. I was born and bred here in England but my grandparents and father were Irish. Based on your experiences here, I have now started the process of applying for an Irish Passport.
Thanks for this. My grandparents were Irish and moved to Scotland (as many others did at the time) when they were young. It was good to hear about your experience of it
Congratulations. That sounds great. My grandmother was born in N. Ireland & moved to the States as a baby. No wait,,, Dublin. Eh,,,, I have completely lost my geography!
@@thegreatvanziniphotos5976 that means that you could apply for an Irish passport too should you desire. Dublin (Eire) or N. Ireland are both accepted.
Good luck on your journey. I applied and was also successful. I haven't used my British passport in over 2 years now and can stay in France without restriction. Enjoy your freedom!
Congrats! I have started gathering documents. I am waiting for my grandmothers birth certificate from Ireland. I did get an official copy of her 1935 marriage certificate, which is pretty cool. I am going to work with my mother to get her birth certificate and marriage certificate, so hopefully in a year or 2 I will be an Irish citizen too!
Excellent , well done. How long did it take you in the end?
หลายเดือนก่อน +1
@@ThatMicro43Guy just over 1 year but my application was delayed due to me stupidly forgetting to put my signature the form so they sent it back to me.
Great your passport to the life you want and the bonus of finding out about your ancestors win win. Bring your camera to Ireland the west coast so so beautiful. Best wishes from Irish Republic
@@camerasam1 I shall. One of my aims has been to visit my ancestral home and maybe meet some family but I didn’t want to do it until I could go there as a bona fide Irish citizen. That’s what I’m planning on doing as soon as the passport comes through.
@@ThatMicro43Guy Ah fair enough. I have a sneaking suspition that I may need to resend mine, I noticed on the form recently that of the 4 photos, 2 need the application form number adding, which I'm pretty sure I didn't do. Nevermind, Hopefully it wont add too much additional time to my application. I'm 8 months in now so won't be too long.
@@bullet-catcherhohoho250 still look into it further, I’ve heard of people who have gained it through GG grandparents. However there was a major law change I. 2005 and people not born on the island before that have different restrictions. Unfortunately I have not researched this.
So happy for you well done 👏 🎉 i need to start this process but I’m not good at doing on line stuff. I have my mums birth certificate but its a copy i think. How do you get the originals? My grandma was Irish born in Ireland as her mum was too. My mother was born in UK london as I was too
You can do it!. The online procedure is easy, you cannot get to the next stage until you complete the current stage so it doesn’t let you go wrong. You can go online for both the Irish and British certificate offices and so long as you know the details such as date and place of birth it’s easy. Each certificate costs between £20-30 and they are official copies. I actually purchased official copies of all my certificates as I didn’t want to send my originals. As they are the official copies they are classed as certified. It’s easier than you think but so frustrating having to wait 10 months.
Hello Brian, I am currently in the same situation.. my grandma is from Ireland and I am looking at getting an Irish passport but there is little information I know. My father (grandmas son) has passed so I don’t know a lot of information. I would love for you to help or give advice please. Thank you.
The key thing is getting dates and places. I ordered my grandmothers (gm) birth certificate only because I knew her birthdate and her place of birth. I found them for me by using ancestry.com but it took a bit of searching. I then used that info to order a certificate from the Irish records office. I also ordered birth, marriage, divorce and death certificates (where appropriate) from the UK records office. It takes a bit of detective work unfortunately
Wow -- bureaucracy! I wonder how many people had to view/stamp/manipulate your documents to get that done! But it sounds like you have cleared a major hurdle to getting ready for official retirement! Three questions 1) what is your personal opinion about Brexit overall -- did things actually get better for the UK, or worse? 2) Are there any downsides to having the dual citizenship (paying taxes in both countries? etc.)? and 3) How does this all affect Mrs. Four-Thirds? Does she need the dual-citizenship passport in order to emigrate to Cyprus, or is being married to you enough (that would be a funny question to ask her!!!)? Cheers! I hope that they have good tea in Cyprus!
@@aengusmacnaughton1375 ok, let’s hit the important points first! ……it’s a former British colony….of course they have great tea lol I’m only replying to this because it’s you, there have been so many trolls wanting to turn these videos and the ones on my “path to Paphos” channel into a platform for hate politics that I’ve been refusing to even converse with them. I’m also going to avoid being too political here too. So here goes… First, my journey is one of three areas of information, knowns, not knowns and not known not knowns lol most of my answers are in the latter two categories I won’t say how I voted suffice to say I stayed up all election night and couldn’t believe what I was seeing. People who know me know, those who don’t generally don’t need to. I’ve heard all sorts of people blaming our current economic and society issues on brexit but I don’t go for that as a major factor, as most western economies are in trouble too since the covid issues and the shutdown of economies. Immigration in The UK is out of control and that’s not down to Brexit. The biggest issue with Brexit, in my opinion, is the stupidity fighting at all levels because a public vote with an enormous turnout didn’t go the way people expected and the fact that our politicians never implemented the Brexit the said we were promised. The trolls and haters are those still fighting against a vote they didn’t like. For my point of view I think there have been so many amazing trade opportunities missed and so many bureaucratic and legal choices we could have made with our independence squandered by our government & civil service because of their own greed….and we all pay….its nothing to do with Brexit, it’s corruption at the top to feather their own next. Obviously the other thing it’s affected me personally is my chance of an enjoyable retirement in the sun because of the loss of open and free EU travel, should I not have had this family trump card (oh dear, am i allowed to say trump lol) to play in an Irish passport. So I think the UK is considerably worse since we came out in 2020 but I attribute little of our situation to Brexit and most of it to world situations and tyrannical corruption. There, that’s not controversial lol. Enough of that though, ancient history now. Now, bureaucracy, yes, probably hundreds of stamps but I have no issue with that as at least I know it’s real and official. The real bureaucracy happened this week when I sent off for my first passport. Even though their own government department sent my certificates back to me just last week I still had to send them off again along with another new photo (my citizenship took 10 months and the passport requires a photo no older than 6 months) and have them all certified…again. You couldn’t make it up lol Tax is a nightmare as I will still own my home in the UK but rent it out to my son, so taxable income. Plus I’ll still be doing some “digital nomad” type work delivering teaching via zoom to UK students paid by a UK company, my pensions are all UK based but will be paid into my Cyprus bank account, but my residency and most of my income will be Cyprus. It’s a minefield which I have to get an international tax advisor to guide me on. This is an issue of having financial interests in two countries not the dual citizenship. For the dual citizenship I don’t reside nor have any financial interests in Ireland so it’s not a problem at all and as a FBR (foreign born register) it’s accepted that I’ve never had a financial or residential tie unless I’ve informed them (that’s part of the 10 months of checks). Passport wise if Mrs 43 is accompanying me into EU then comes in with the same basic rights as I have as she is legally my spouse. As Cyprus is not yet part of Schengen yet we both have to apply for residency within 4 months of being there, my registration is easier than hers and we have a similar residency status. Once she gets her residency she’s not limited to the 90 days in 180 limit and doesn’t need special visas for travel or work. So no, she doesn’t ‘need’ an EU passport while we are married and resident. After we have been resident on the island for a certain amount of time (I think it’s either 5 or 7, not sure) either of us could also apply for nationalised citizenship of Cyprus so she could get an EU passport for herself further down the line. Wow that was a long answer, hopefully detailed enough. I may take this answer down in a couple of days though as I don’t want it as an incentive for the hate trolls. I try to keep this channel informative rather than political as much as I can
@@ThatMicro43Guy -- Wow! Thanks for the info -- even though I have been to the UK and Europe (pre EU) and have friends there, I had nothing personally invested in Brexit-or-not, just interested in how it has affected the various folks that I know there -- and your moving to Cyprus was something that I had never thought of. But it sounds like you have thought it out and are aware of the various hoops, mazes and pitfalls!
@@ThatMicro43Guy I’m in a suburb of Detroit that is rather built up. We drive an hour away to go to nature parks for an escape. We have plenty of green spaces where I live, but houses and stores everywhere.
Hi Brian, I'm pleased for you. As a former expat, there's a couple of things to be aware of should you need to come back. Don't be surprised if you're entitled to zero help for the UK government. Make sure you can still apply for your UK state pension from Paphos. Don't expect your UK state pension to go up at all once (if you get it) when you're living in Paphos. No expat Pensions go up in line with UK inflation , earnings or the triple lock, as expats don't experience UK inflation etc. Double check death duties for surviving spouses, some EU countries apply death duties before transfer of assets to surviving spouses. If in doubt, buy property through a local limited liability perpetual entity (UK equivalent Ltd company). Some EU countries apply taxes and penalties ( council tax parking fines etc.) against the asset not the individual so use local nationals to sort the legalise, otherwise you could buy something with more debt than it's worth. In some EU countries, local mayors have the power to empty your bank account for unpaid debts that have been marked in the past against assets you've just purchased. Then there's health care.. Keep us informed of your adventures.
I haven't watched this but strongly disagree with distant relatives being used for dual passporting. Nationality is a one or other to me unless you were born elsewhere or lived in the chosen country. Nationality for convenience makes a mockery of it. In some countries you could be called up and your RAF service would be useful.
@@peternumber19 maybe you should watch it before making blind comment. You are, of course, allowed your views, personally I’m comfortable with it including multi nationality. It is worth pointing out that if my Gran had filled in the paperwork to register my mother when she was born….and my mother had done the same for me in 1961 then this wouldn’t have been an issue, I already was (and am) an Irish citizen indeed a dual nationality as was my mother, all I’ve done is catchup on the paperwork. Military wise either may try to call me up but at 63 with chronic health conditions I’m probably not high on their list although I’d jump at the chance to be honest. Thanks for the comment
Congratulations, Brian, on joining the leprechaun‘s! My closest is my grandfather, born in London, and I‘m not particularly keen on having dual nationality with the UK. Hubby is Austrian born. Austria didn’t believe in dual nationality and he lost his nationality when he became an Aussie. At least Australia is a very large country and we can live anywhere here - but haven‘t!!!! Too old for it now. At least you can begin to plan the next chapter of your life. 😊
@@trishf29it certainly is a door opener to those plans. Plus it’s going to take so much pressure off my wife, she plans on coming over a little after I go but she’s wanting to retire properly and walk the dogs on the beach, which I’m totally in agreement with. Me, I’m going to be working more for a while by singing in the hotels and going more videos.
@@ThatMicro43Guy That sounds like a great plan! Especially the singing - and walking the dogs on the beach. They’re only allowed to be off-lead in designated areas here. I can well understand why you want a little sun in your life, just make sure you have an air-con for those extremely hot days!
@@trishf29 yes, I’ve already noticed the signs on the beaches for the dog access. To be honest the dogs will be walked early morning and late evening as it’s too much for them during the day especially in the summer months. We’ve experienced a couple of 40+ deg in the shade in the past. So Its probably too much for us too so we are looking to come home in jul/aug each year and tour the UK in our caravan, that’ll guarantee us low temperatures and no sunshine lol.
@@ThatMicro43Guy Great idea! Keeps up the contact. I used to walk my dogs in the morning too, before I went to work. My Sheltie and Corgi used to sleep on the cool floor tiles. Won’t tell you where they were in winter!!! Both gone now. Hope you will continue with your channel when in Cyprus.😎😊
@@trishf29 I’m certainly planning on it. It’s a shame when your dogs pass on. If you are like me then they really are not pets but family members, it really hurts. So my condolences for losing them
Funny u have to get an Irish passport to work in Cyprus!! Lots of others getting into Ireland for nothing and will probably have a passport to travel anywhere within a couple of years!! I'm Irish living in Japan and can't get a passport for my son ( born out of wedlock) with my Japanese girlfriend!! Paper work not in order!! Anyway, good luck mate in Cyprus on the Irish passport!👍
Congratulations Brian and best of luck on this new chapter 👏
@@dianedunn8872 thank you
Well Done Brian. I was born and bred here in England but my grandparents and father were Irish. Based on your experiences here, I have now started the process of applying for an Irish Passport.
@@oc2phish07 excellent. It’s a much easier and faster process having a parent rather than only grandparents born in Ireland. Best of luck
Thanks for this. My grandparents were Irish and moved to Scotland (as many others did at the time) when they were young. It was good to hear about your experience of it
Congratulations. That sounds great. My grandmother was born in N. Ireland & moved to the States as a baby. No wait,,, Dublin. Eh,,,, I have completely lost my geography!
@@thegreatvanziniphotos5976 that means that you could apply for an Irish passport too should you desire. Dublin (Eire) or N. Ireland are both accepted.
Good luck on your journey. I applied and was also successful. I haven't used my British passport in over 2 years now and can stay in France without restriction. Enjoy your freedom!
Good to know, thank you. Just waiting for the passport now
Congratulations Brian, all the best with the move to Cyprus.
Looks like the FBR processing times are creeping up again?
Thanks, Dave.
Congrats! I have started gathering documents. I am waiting for my grandmothers birth certificate from Ireland. I did get an official copy of her 1935 marriage certificate, which is pretty cool. I am going to work with my mother to get her birth certificate and marriage certificate, so hopefully in a year or 2 I will be an Irish citizen too!
@@YeOldSchoolNerd best of luck with the journey. My sister also started hers today too.
Congratulations!! Your tenacity has paid off!
Yes! Thank you!
I’m in Scotland and grandparents were born in Donegal and I got my Irish passport through the FBR route.
Excellent , well done. How long did it take you in the end?
@@ThatMicro43Guy just over 1 year but my application was delayed due to me stupidly forgetting to put my signature the form so they sent it back to me.
Yes, I’ve just done a similar silly thing in sending off for my first passport. I enclosed my wedding certificate instead of my birth certificate
Great your passport to the life you want and the bonus of finding out about your ancestors win win. Bring your camera to Ireland the west coast so so beautiful. Best wishes from Irish Republic
@@camerasam1 I shall.
One of my aims has been to visit my ancestral home and maybe meet some family but I didn’t want to do it until I could go there as a bona fide Irish citizen. That’s what I’m planning on doing as soon as the passport comes through.
Great news! Congrats. Did you get asked for any additional docs?
@@MrLZVlogs no, just the original ones.
@@ThatMicro43Guy Ah fair enough. I have a sneaking suspition that I may need to resend mine, I noticed on the form recently that of the 4 photos, 2 need the application form number adding, which I'm pretty sure I didn't do. Nevermind, Hopefully it wont add too much additional time to my application. I'm 8 months in now so won't be too long.
Unlucky for me, my great grandmothers were Irish, O' Connelly & O' Brian. Both my grandmothers were born in England.
@@bullet-catcherhohoho250 still look into it further, I’ve heard of people who have gained it through GG grandparents. However there was a major law change I. 2005 and people not born on the island before that have different restrictions. Unfortunately I have not researched this.
So happy for you well done 👏 🎉 i need to start this process but I’m not good at doing on line stuff. I have my mums birth certificate but its a copy i think. How do you get the originals? My grandma was Irish born in Ireland as her mum was too. My mother was born in UK london as I was too
You can do it!. The online procedure is easy, you cannot get to the next stage until you complete the current stage so it doesn’t let you go wrong.
You can go online for both the Irish and British certificate offices and so long as you know the details such as date and place of birth it’s easy. Each certificate costs between £20-30 and they are official copies. I actually purchased official copies of all my certificates as I didn’t want to send my originals. As they are the official copies they are classed as certified.
It’s easier than you think but so frustrating having to wait 10 months.
Pleased that it’s all working out Brian
I feel we will be better suited meeting in O’Neills Bar now on TOTK’s Rd instead of the Old English Rose. 😊
@@keith.anderson1257 sounds good to me Keith
Congratulations! 🎉
@@Roe691 thank you
Hello Brian, I am currently in the same situation.. my grandma is from Ireland and I am looking at getting an Irish passport but there is little information I know. My father (grandmas son) has passed so I don’t know a lot of information. I would love for you to help or give advice please. Thank you.
The key thing is getting dates and places. I ordered my grandmothers (gm) birth certificate only because I knew her birthdate and her place of birth. I found them for me by using ancestry.com but it took a bit of searching. I then used that info to order a certificate from the Irish records office. I also ordered birth, marriage, divorce and death certificates (where appropriate) from the UK records office. It takes a bit of detective work unfortunately
Wow -- bureaucracy! I wonder how many people had to view/stamp/manipulate your documents to get that done! But it sounds like you have cleared a major hurdle to getting ready for official retirement! Three questions 1) what is your personal opinion about Brexit overall -- did things actually get better for the UK, or worse? 2) Are there any downsides to having the dual citizenship (paying taxes in both countries? etc.)? and 3) How does this all affect Mrs. Four-Thirds? Does she need the dual-citizenship passport in order to emigrate to Cyprus, or is being married to you enough (that would be a funny question to ask her!!!)? Cheers! I hope that they have good tea in Cyprus!
@@aengusmacnaughton1375 ok, let’s hit the important points first! ……it’s a former British colony….of course they have great tea lol
I’m only replying to this because it’s you, there have been so many trolls wanting to turn these videos and the ones on my “path to Paphos” channel into a platform for hate politics that I’ve been refusing to even converse with them. I’m also going to avoid being too political here too. So here goes…
First, my journey is one of three areas of information, knowns, not knowns and not known not knowns lol most of my answers are in the latter two categories
I won’t say how I voted suffice to say I stayed up all election night and couldn’t believe what I was seeing. People who know me know, those who don’t generally don’t need to. I’ve heard all sorts of people blaming our current economic and society issues on brexit but I don’t go for that as a major factor, as most western economies are in trouble too since the covid issues and the shutdown of economies. Immigration in The UK is out of control and that’s not down to Brexit. The biggest issue with Brexit, in my opinion, is the stupidity fighting at all levels because a public vote with an enormous turnout didn’t go the way people expected and the fact that our politicians never implemented the Brexit the said we were promised. The trolls and haters are those still fighting against a vote they didn’t like.
For my point of view I think there have been so many amazing trade opportunities missed and so many bureaucratic and legal choices we could have made with our independence squandered by our government & civil service because of their own greed….and we all pay….its nothing to do with Brexit, it’s corruption at the top to feather their own next. Obviously the other thing it’s affected me personally is my chance of an enjoyable retirement in the sun because of the loss of open and free EU travel, should I not have had this family trump card (oh dear, am i allowed to say trump lol) to play in an Irish passport.
So I think the UK is considerably worse since we came out in 2020 but I attribute little of our situation to Brexit and most of it to world situations and tyrannical corruption. There, that’s not controversial lol. Enough of that though, ancient history now.
Now, bureaucracy, yes, probably hundreds of stamps but I have no issue with that as at least I know it’s real and official. The real bureaucracy happened this week when I sent off for my first passport. Even though their own government department sent my certificates back to me just last week I still had to send them off again along with another new photo (my citizenship took 10 months and the passport requires a photo no older than 6 months) and have them all certified…again. You couldn’t make it up lol
Tax is a nightmare as I will still own my home in the UK but rent it out to my son, so taxable income. Plus I’ll still be doing some “digital nomad” type work delivering teaching via zoom to UK students paid by a UK company, my pensions are all UK based but will be paid into my Cyprus bank account, but my residency and most of my income will be Cyprus. It’s a minefield which I have to get an international tax advisor to guide me on. This is an issue of having financial interests in two countries not the dual citizenship.
For the dual citizenship I don’t reside nor have any financial interests in Ireland so it’s not a problem at all and as a FBR (foreign born register) it’s accepted that I’ve never had a financial or residential tie unless I’ve informed them (that’s part of the 10 months of checks).
Passport wise if Mrs 43 is accompanying me into EU then comes in with the same basic rights as I have as she is legally my spouse. As Cyprus is not yet part of Schengen yet we both have to apply for residency within 4 months of being there, my registration is easier than hers and we have a similar residency status. Once she gets her residency she’s not limited to the 90 days in 180 limit and doesn’t need special visas for travel or work. So no, she doesn’t ‘need’ an EU passport while we are married and resident. After we have been resident on the island for a certain amount of time (I think it’s either 5 or 7, not sure) either of us could also apply for nationalised citizenship of Cyprus so she could get an EU passport for herself further down the line.
Wow that was a long answer, hopefully detailed enough. I may take this answer down in a couple of days though as I don’t want it as an incentive for the hate trolls. I try to keep this channel informative rather than political as much as I can
@@ThatMicro43Guy -- Wow! Thanks for the info -- even though I have been to the UK and Europe (pre EU) and have friends there, I had nothing personally invested in Brexit-or-not, just interested in how it has affected the various folks that I know there -- and your moving to Cyprus was something that I had never thought of. But it sounds like you have thought it out and are aware of the various hoops, mazes and pitfalls!
May tropical sunshine always shine over your new home.
@@WhoIsSerafin thank you
Oró ‘sé do bheatha abhaile :)
So exciting! My dream is to live in a rural area with few neighbors and beautiful landscapes.
@@AprilClayton I thought you already did. Some of the nature shots you upload look very rural and nice.
@@ThatMicro43Guy I’m in a suburb of Detroit that is rather built up. We drive an hour away to go to nature parks for an escape. We have plenty of green spaces where I live, but houses and stores everywhere.
Hi Brian,
I'm pleased for you.
As a former expat, there's a couple of things to be aware of should you need to come back. Don't be surprised if you're entitled to zero help for the UK government. Make sure you can still apply for your UK state pension from Paphos. Don't expect your UK state pension to go up at all once (if you get it) when you're living in Paphos. No expat Pensions go up in line with UK inflation , earnings or the triple lock, as expats don't experience UK inflation etc.
Double check death duties for surviving spouses, some EU countries apply death duties before transfer of assets to surviving spouses.
If in doubt, buy property through a local limited liability perpetual entity (UK equivalent Ltd company).
Some EU countries apply taxes and penalties ( council tax parking fines etc.) against the asset not the individual so use local nationals to sort the legalise, otherwise you could buy something with more debt than it's worth.
In some EU countries, local mayors have the power to empty your bank account for unpaid debts that have been marked in the past against assets you've just purchased.
Then there's health care..
Keep us informed of your adventures.
@@malcolmwright6948 thanks for the advice. Really appreciated.
I haven't watched this but strongly disagree with distant relatives being used for dual passporting. Nationality is a one or other to me unless you were born elsewhere or lived in the chosen country. Nationality for convenience makes a mockery of it. In some countries you could be called up and your RAF service would be useful.
@@peternumber19 maybe you should watch it before making blind comment. You are, of course, allowed your views, personally I’m comfortable with it including multi nationality. It is worth pointing out that if my Gran had filled in the paperwork to register my mother when she was born….and my mother had done the same for me in 1961 then this wouldn’t have been an issue, I already was (and am) an Irish citizen indeed a dual nationality as was my mother, all I’ve done is catchup on the paperwork.
Military wise either may try to call me up but at 63 with chronic health conditions I’m probably not high on their list although I’d jump at the chance to be honest.
Thanks for the comment
@@peternumber19 well said I totally agree
Scéal iontach, caithfidh tú Gaeilge a fhoghlaim anois!! Togha fir.
@@EamonJeffers thank you. Yes that’s two languages to learn Irish and Greek. Lots of work to do.
Congratulations, Brian, on joining the leprechaun‘s! My closest is my grandfather, born in London, and I‘m not particularly keen on having dual nationality with the UK. Hubby is Austrian born. Austria didn’t believe in dual nationality and he lost his nationality when he became an Aussie. At least Australia is a very large country and we can live anywhere here - but haven‘t!!!! Too old for it now. At least you can begin to plan the next chapter of your life. 😊
@@trishf29it certainly is a door opener to those plans. Plus it’s going to take so much pressure off my wife, she plans on coming over a little after I go but she’s wanting to retire properly and walk the dogs on the beach, which I’m totally in agreement with. Me, I’m going to be working more for a while by singing in the hotels and going more videos.
@@ThatMicro43Guy That sounds like a great plan! Especially the singing - and walking the dogs on the beach. They’re only allowed to be off-lead in designated areas here. I can well understand why you want a little sun in your life, just make sure you have an air-con for those extremely hot days!
@@trishf29 yes, I’ve already noticed the signs on the beaches for the dog access. To be honest the dogs will be walked early morning and late evening as it’s too much for them during the day especially in the summer months. We’ve experienced a couple of 40+ deg in the shade in the past. So Its probably too much for us too so we are looking to come home in jul/aug each year and tour the UK in our caravan, that’ll guarantee us low temperatures and no sunshine lol.
@@ThatMicro43Guy Great idea! Keeps up the contact. I used to walk my dogs in the morning too, before I went to work. My Sheltie and Corgi used to sleep on the cool floor tiles. Won’t tell you where they were in winter!!! Both gone now. Hope you will continue with your channel when in Cyprus.😎😊
@@trishf29 I’m certainly planning on it.
It’s a shame when your dogs pass on. If you are like me then they really are not pets but family members, it really hurts. So my condolences for losing them
Gawd! They let anybody in now! The true Irish like me are being overwhelmed by u ‘pseudo Irish’ lot 🤣.
@@michaelreid2143 lol is that why you left to come and join me in England? Lol
@@ThatMicro43Guy Somebody had to come to try & educate u heathen lot - and that was a task & a half 🤣
😂👍
Funny u have to get an Irish passport to work in Cyprus!! Lots of others getting into Ireland for nothing and will probably have a passport to travel anywhere within a couple of years!! I'm Irish living in Japan and can't get a passport for my son ( born out of wedlock) with my Japanese girlfriend!! Paper work not in order!! Anyway, good luck mate in Cyprus on the Irish passport!👍