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I watch right now Galileo science and docu show there is a really smart German who is manager in China for a high tech company he moved to China with his family and he says they all really like it there but now even this super important dude stays only a few years but I don't know if he wants it that way or because you can't become permanent resident or Chinese citizen I'm just curious
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You would need to be very careful in China. They have shown their true colours with how they are treating Australia.
And look how they are treating this Irishman.
https://www.voanews.com/east-asia-pa...s-global-issue
Australia's ambassador in Beijing has labelled China’s campaign of economic punishment against Australia “vindictive” as the diplomatic relationship between the two countries remains stuck in a rut.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-03-...tive/100030700
Not a country you can rely on. They also are getting very expansionist as of late.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-56474847
Any westerner living in China would need to be very careful because China is not above imprisoning anyone if your country vexes them.
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Not impossible but very hard. Like most Asian countries, China's concept of nationality is very much jus sanguinis, not jus solis.
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I read few weeks ago that if you don't have relatives who have Chinese citizenship you can't be naturalized. Basically it is impossible for a non-chinese to become a Chinese citizen.
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Getting Korean (Republic of Korea) and Japanese citizenship is much easier than Chinese. I don't know about other Asian countries, but I know that in Japan, you can apply for citizenship after having been domiciled in Japan for five years or more consecutively and assuming that you have had a valid status of residence throughout the prescribed period of time. The same applies to South Korea.
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