Diplomats and academics have raised pros and cons of allowing Singaporeans to have dual citizenship, according to a report in The Sunday Times today.
In 2013, the government had responded to parliamentary questions, saying that Singapore being "a small and young nation" is concerned as it could dilute citizens' commitment to the country.
The issue of whether Singapore should one day consider dual citizenship has been raised from time to time in discussions about the future of Singapore citizenship.
Singapore "may be losing good people" when Singaporeans living abroad are forced to give up their citizenship, said Professor Tan Tai Yong of Yale-NUS College in the National University of Singapore.
Associate Professor Eugene Tan of Singapore Management University said that dual citizenship should not have a detrimental impact in terms of people's sense of belonging to the country.
A strong opponent of dual citizenship, Professor Leo Suryadinata of the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute argued that citizenship is about political loyalty and it is doubtful if a person can be loyal to two countries.
Institute of Policy Studies researcher Debbie Soon said if Singapore were to one day be in conflict with another country, dual citizenship would be problematic because of the island state's conscription system.
"But discussions on dual citizenship do not have to yield a binary yes-or-no answer," argued Associate Professor Elaine Ho of the National University of Singapore.
There are in-between options that may enhance the links people have to Singapore, she noted.
One is the British example of an ancestry visa, which offers foreigners who can prove ancestral links to Britain an inside track to living and working there. A similar concept is the Overseas Citizenship of India.
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