看看gemini怎么样解释谷的国籍

来源: 2026-02-21 10:19:00 [旧帖] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读:

谷狗是不是彻底舔共了?

不作翻译,不想跟不懂英文的人辩论。

"China does not recognize it under any circumstances" is a legal doctrine. It means that in the eyes of the Chinese government, your other citizenship is invisible and legally void. If you are a Chinese national, you cannot use your foreign passport to claim special rights (like foreign consular protection) while inside China. Here is how that works in practice and how it differs from a "requirement" to renounce.
1. The "Invisible" Passport
If you hold both a Chinese and a Canadian passport, and you enter China using Chinese travel documents:
? Legally: You are 100% a Chinese citizen.
? Consular Protection: If you get into legal trouble or are arrested, the Canadian embassy will not be allowed to visit you or provide legal aid. China will tell them, "This person is a Chinese national; your laws do not apply to them here."
2. Do you have to renounce to keep Chinese citizenship?
The law handles this in two very different ways depending on how you got your dual status:
A. If you voluntarily naturalized (e.g., you chose to become American)
? Automatic Loss (Article 9): You don't "have" to renounce. The law says you already lost your Chinese citizenship the moment you took the foreign oath.
? The Reality: Many people don't report this to the Chinese government and keep their Chinese ID (Hukou). However, if the government finds out (e.g., through fingerprinting at the border), they will cancel your Chinese status immediately. You don't have a choice to "keep" it.
B. If you were born with both (e.g., born in the US to Chinese parents)
? "Nationality Conflict": China views this not as "dual citizenship," but as a conflict of laws.
? The Solution: To keep your Chinese status as an adult, you typically do not have to show a certificate of renunciation for your foreign passport. Instead, China simply ignores your foreign passport. They will issue you a Chinese Travel Document (旅行证) instead of a regular passport to let you enter/exit.
? The Catch: Once you turn 18, if you want a regular Chinese Passport, you may be asked to formally renounce your foreign citizenship.