No it doesn’t, it just thinks it does.
So how will those kids pass the language and academic placement test and formal interview?
I had a foreign friend send his kids to the Philippines to study as he could not afford the fees in Taiwan.
Send them to cram schools and make them study 16 hours a day, along with violin and piano lessons.
US$30,000 per semester? I don’t think so.
Half of Asia has at least two different names they can use. Legally. Also many Europeans. I’ve used different names on the same nationality passport because we don’t just have one language. That lady was just not very sharp.
Using different names can cause problems though.
The only problem I had was in Belgium when I was detained for having two different names in my Taiwan passport. I just asked their people don’t you just want a passport with one name in it then? They were fine with a passport with one name in it. Never been an issue in other countries.
So weird that they question the way other countries issue passports
Belgium authorities at the airport insisted that it was illegal under Belgium law to have two different identities in the same travel document. They were fine with me having multiple nationalities with different names. So now I use a different name on each nationality passport. Means I carry credit cards / atm cards with different names as well from different countries.
As far as I know, I can’t resume my citizenship after renunciation. At least, that’s what our embassy in HK told me.
https://pakistanconsulatehouston.org/renunciation-of-citizenship/
If I could get it back, I would get it just to renounce it again, this time with my daughter, so I can get a renunciation certificate for her and try my luck with Taiwan’s HHR office.
Ohh I’ve had several issues lately because of having two different names. It becomes a pain to legalize documents to be used abroad if the certificate comes with the name in one country, but you have to use it on the other one.