Practice Questions on Citizenship topic for UPSC and state PSC exams Leave a Comment / Indian Polity and Constitution MCQs / By PSC Chronicles Team Practice Questions on Citizenship1. Citizenship provisions in Indian Constitution are contained in: Part I Articles 1-4 Part II Articles 5-11 Part III Articles 12-35 Part IV Articles 36-51Part II (Articles 5 to 11) deals with citizenship at commencement of Constitution (26 Jan 1950). Article 11 empowers Parliament to regulate citizenship thereafter.2. Which Article empowers Parliament to make law on citizenship? Article 5 Article 9 Article 10 Article 11Article 11 gives Parliament plenary power to regulate acquisition and termination of citizenship, overriding Articles 5-10. Citizenship Act 1955 enacted under this.3. India provides for: Single citizenship Dual citizenship State citizenship Both Union and StateConstitution adopts single citizenship for whole country unlike USA. All citizens enjoy same rights irrespective of state domicile.4. A person domiciled in India at commencement (26 Jan 1950) became citizen under Article 5 if: Born in India Either parent born in India Ordinarily resident 5 years preceding Any of theseArticle 5: domicile + (a) born in India OR (b) either parent born OR (c) ordinarily resident ≥5 years immediately before commencement.5. Article 6 deals with citizenship of persons migrating from: Pakistan to India Bangladesh to India India to Pakistan Sri Lanka to IndiaArticle 6: migrants from Pakistan. If migrated before 19 July 1948, automatic if parent/grandparent born in undivided India. After that date, required registration.6. Cut-off date for automatic citizenship for Pakistan migrants under Article 6 is: 15 Aug 1947 19 July 1948 26 Jan 1950 26 Nov 1949Before 19 July 1948 migration treated liberally; after required application and residence.7. Article 7 deals with migrants who went to Pakistan but later returned to India: Automatic citizenship Citizenship by registration after resettlement permit No citizenship Citizenship by birthArticle 7: persons who migrated to Pakistan after 1 March 1947 but returned under resettlement permit could register.8. Article 8 provides citizenship for Persons of Indian Origin residing outside India: By registration at Indian diplomatic mission Automatic By naturalization Not providedArticle 8: PIOs whose parents/grandparents born in undivided India could register with Indian consulate.9. Under Article 9, a person voluntarily acquiring foreign citizenship: Retains Indian citizenship Ceases to be Indian citizen Can hold dual Depends on countryArticle 9: voluntary acquisition of foreign citizenship results in automatic loss of Indian citizenship. India prohibits dual citizenship.10. Article 10 states citizenship continues subject to: President’s pleasure Parliamentary law Supreme Court State lawArticle 10: continuance subject to Parliament-made law under Article 11.11. Citizenship Act was first enacted in: 1950 1955 1949 1960Parliament enacted Citizenship Act, 1955 under Article 11, providing for acquisition and loss.12. Citizenship by birth in India originally (1955 Act) was based on: Jus soli – birth in India irrespective of parents Jus sanguinis only Both parents Indian ResidenceOriginal 1955 Act granted citizenship to anyone born in India on/after 26 Jan 1950 (pure jus soli).13. Citizenship by birth was restricted by 1986 Amendment to require: Both parents Indian At least one parent Indian One parent Indian and other not illegal migrant (post 1987) Parents married1986 Amendment (effective 1 July 1987): born in India + at least one parent Indian citizen.14. After Citizenship Amendment Act 2003, for birth on/after 3 Dec 2004, requirement is: Both parents Indian OR one Indian and other not illegal migrant Only father Indian Mother Indian enough Any birth2003 Amendment tightened further: both parents citizens, OR one citizen and other not illegal migrant, to curb illegal immigration.15. Citizenship by descent for person born outside India on/after 26 Jan 1950 but before 10 Dec 1992 required: Father Indian Mother Indian Either parent Indian Both parentsOriginal rule was paternal descent only. 1992 amendment made it gender-neutral.16. 1992 Amendment to Citizenship Act provided: Citizenship by descent through mother also Abolished OCI Allowed dual citizenship Removed registrationFrom 10 Dec 1992, child born abroad gets citizenship if either parent is Indian.17. For child born abroad on/after 3 Dec 2004, citizenship by descent requires: Registration within 1 year at consulate and parents declare no other passport Automatic Both parents present Residence in India2003 Amendment: birth must be registered within one year at Indian mission, and parents declare child does not hold foreign passport.18. Citizenship by registration under Section 5 is available to: PIO spouse of Indian citizen after 7 years residence Any foreigner after 5 years Illegal migrant TouristSection 5: PIOs, spouses of citizens (7 years), minor children, etc., can register. Illegal migrants excluded by 2003 amendment.19. Minimum residence for naturalization under Section 6 (general) is: 5 years 7 years 11 years (12 months + 11 years) 14 yearsOriginal requirement: 12 months immediately preceding + 11 of previous 14 years = 12 years total. 2019 CAA reduced to 5 years for specified minorities.20. Citizenship by naturalization requires applicant to: Renounce other citizenship, know language, good character Hold property Be Hindu Be born in IndiaThird Schedule conditions: not illegal migrant, renounce foreign citizenship, reside required period, good character, adequate knowledge of language in Eighth Schedule.21. Citizenship by incorporation of territory is under: Section 7 Article 5 Government notification Presidential orderSection 7: when territory becomes part of India (e.g., Goa 1961, Sikkim 1975, Puducherry).22. Loss of citizenship by renunciation is under: Section 8 Section 9 Section 10 Article 9Section 8: adult citizen of full capacity may renounce, declaration registered. Minor children also lose but can resume at 18.23. Automatic termination of citizenship on acquiring foreign citizenship is under: Section 8 Section 9 Section 10 Article 8Section 9 gives effect to Article 9: voluntary acquisition terminates Indian citizenship.24. Deprivation of citizenship by government is under: Section 10 Section 9 Section 8 Article 11Section 10: Central Govt can deprive citizenship obtained by fraud, disloyalty, enemy trade, 7-year abroad without registration, etc.25. Which ground is NOT valid for deprivation under Section 10? Obtained by fraud Shown disloyalty Resided abroad 5 years Imprisoned 2+ years within 5 years of registrationSection 10 requires 7 continuous years abroad without annual registration, not 5. Other grounds listed are valid.26. Illegal migrant is defined in Citizenship Act as: Foreigner without valid passport/visa or overstaying Any refugee PIO OCIInserted by 2003 Amendment: person who entered without valid documents or overstayed. Barred from citizenship by registration/naturalization.27. Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) scheme introduced by: Citizenship Amendment Act 2003 2005 Amendment 2015 Amendment 2019 Amendment2003 Amendment inserted Section 7A-7D, implemented 2005. Provides lifelong visa, not citizenship.28. OCI cardholders do NOT enjoy: Right to vote Multiple entry lifelong visa Parity with NRIs in economic field Adoption rightsOCI is not citizenship; no voting, no constitutional posts, no government jobs, cannot buy agricultural land.29. PIO card scheme merged with OCI by: Citizenship Amendment Act 2015 2003 Act 2019 Act 2020 rules2015 amendment merged PIO into OCI; all PIO cards deemed OCI from 9 Jan 2015.30. NRI is: Indian citizen residing abroad for employment/business >182 days Foreign citizen of Indian origin OCI holder StatelessNRI under Income Tax Act: Indian citizen living abroad >182 days in financial year. Retains citizenship and voting rights (postal/proxy limited).31. Citizenship Amendment Act 2019 provides expedited citizenship to: Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, Christians from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Pakistan entered before 31 Dec 2014 All Muslims from neighbours Tamils from Sri Lanka RohingyaCAA 2019 amends Section 2(1)(b) to exempt specified persecuted minorities from being illegal migrants and reduces residence to 5 years.32. CAA 2019 does NOT apply to: Tribal areas of Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Tripura under Sixth Schedule and ILP areas Whole India Delhi GujaratExemptions under Section 6B for Sixth Schedule and Inner Line Permit states (Arunachal, Nagaland, Mizoram, Manipur).33. Assam Accord cut-off for citizenship is: 1951 1971 (25 March 1971) 1948 1961Assam Accord 1985: persons entered Assam from Bangladesh on/before 25 March 1971 eligible; after are illegal.34. National Register of Citizens (NRC) first prepared for Assam in: 1951 1971 1985 2019NRC 1951 based on census; updated 2013-2019 under SC supervision.35. Which right is available only to citizens, not to foreigners? Article 14 equality Article 21 life Article 15 non-discrimination, Article 16 public employment, Article 19 freedoms, voting Article 25 religionArticles 15,16,19,29 cultural rights, voting, contesting elections, holding constitutional posts reserved for citizens.36. Right to equality before law (Article 14) is available to: Citizens only All persons including foreigners OCI only NRI onlyArticle 14 and 21 are available to all persons, citizen or alien.37. Which constitutional post requires citizenship by birth only? Trick: None – Constitution requires only citizenship President Prime Minister Chief JusticeUnlike US, India requires only citizenship (not natural-born). Any citizen meeting age/qualifications eligible.38. Can a company be a citizen? Yes No – citizenship only for natural persons Yes if registered in India Yes for PSUSupreme Court in State Trading Corporation case: citizenship under Part II is for natural persons only; companies get Article 19 via shareholders.39. Domicile in India for Article 5 means: Permanent home with intention to reside Temporary residence Property ownership Voter IDDomicile = permanent home, animus manendi. Differs from residence.40. Person of Indian Origin (PIO) earlier meant: Foreign citizen with Indian origin up to 4 generations, except Pakistan/Bangladesh Any foreigner NRI OCIPIO card (2002) for foreign nationals up to 4 generations Indian origin, excluding Pakistan, Bangladesh, etc. Merged 2015.41. OCI can be cancelled for: Showing disaffection to Constitution, fraud, imprisonment 2+ years, violation of law Voting in India Buying house Marrying IndianSection 7D grounds: fraud, disaffection, enemy intercourse, conviction, etc.42. Citizenship at commencement did NOT automatically include: Princely states people Those voluntarily acquiring foreign citizenship Migrants from Pakistan before 1948 Domiciled residentsArticle 9 barred those who voluntarily acquired foreign citizenship before 1950.43. Which state enjoys special citizenship provisions? None: Jammu & Kashmir earlier had state subject Nagaland All states equal BothConstitution provides single citizenship; Article 370 gave J&K special rights (state subject) but not separate citizenship; abrogated 2019.44. Proof of citizenship in India is: Passport, birth certificate, etc. – no single document Aadhaar Voter ID only PANIndia has no national citizenship card; multiple documents used. Aadhaar is identity, not proof of citizenship.45. The Citizenship Rules are framed under: Article 11 Section 18 of Citizenship Act Presidential order SC guidelinesSection 18 empowers Central Govt to make rules; Citizenship Rules 2009 as amended.46. A child born in India to foreign diplomats: Gets citizenship by birth Does not get citizenship – exception to jus soli Gets OCI Automatic naturalizationSection 3 excludes children of enemy aliens and foreign diplomats with immunity.47. Renunciation of citizenship by parent affects minor child: Child also loses, can resume Indian citizenship within 1 year of turning 18 Child retains Child becomes stateless No effectSection 8(2): minor loses with parent but may resume by declaration within one year of majority.48. Deprivation order under Section 10 requires: Opportunity of hearing except fraud cases No hearing Parliament approval SC approvalNatural justice: hearing required, except where citizenship obtained by fraud/misrepresentation.49. Long Term Visa (LTV) holders from CAA countries can apply for citizenship after: 5 years residence (6th year) 11 years Immediate 7 yearsCAA 2019 reduces naturalization period to 5 years + 12 months = 6 years total for specified minorities.50. Which amendment introduced concept of ‘Overseas Citizen of India Cardholder’? 2003 2005 2015 20192003 inserted provisions; scheme operationalised 2005. Loading … Practice Questions on CitizenshipTo study current affairs from exam point of view, Click here