However, those who are just "aware they are of Irish descent and feel a strong affinity for Ireland" but are too many generations removed to get an Irish passport would appreciate a document to prove their origins, the ministry said. Members of the Diaspora, which is estimated at 70 million, could get the certificates for an as-yet-unspecified fee. Eligibility criteria would not be "overly cumbersome" and probably won't require the submission of any original documents, though birth certificates, death or marriage records could be taken into consideration, the ministry said.
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It said the idea had been one of the practical proposals of the "Global Irish Economic Forum" last year, a summit of CEOs and media personalities of Irish origin from around the world who brainstormed about ways of getting Ireland out of recession. It said the proposal had received an "overwhelmingly positive response" abroad. "We should not belittle or undermine the value of this sentiment," the ministry said in an e-mailed statement.
However, the press in Ireland was not so uniformly impressed. "Selling a cutesy little heirloom document purporting to confirm such identity, even at a modest fee, has predatory undertones," wrote Martina Devlin in a column for the Irish Independent newspaper. "It puts a price on something which shouldn't be bought or sold," Devlin said. She added: "What's on offer is tawdry, tricksy and really kind of icky. Prize bulls and pedigree dogs, even cars, can be certified - never people."
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