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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
CR001 wrote:Set(M) form Guidance notes say :
5 WHEN TO APPLY
You and any children under 18 who are applying
with you should apply before the end of your/their
permitted stay in the UK when you are nearing
completion of the 2-year qualifying period required
by the Immigration Rules.
Your wife needs to be resident in the UK for 3 years exactly before she can apply for citizenship.
Thanks for your reply....Jambo wrote:1. Yes.
2. No.
3.2. No. They should have ILR.
Read the FAQ.
Thanks Vinny...
Thank you Vinnyvinny wrote:Neither parents were British when these children were born. So, they cannot be British by descent.
The registrations will be under section 3(1) of the BNA because they were born outside the UK. I think they will be British otherwise than by descent (9.1.8). There is no difference between 4 and 5.
charismatic_one wrote:Do I need to include him in my ILR application NO, or should I get mine and my wife's ILR done, without including him as dependant and then apply for child's MN1 after our ILR ? YES
Thanks
Hi King,kingascona wrote:Chapter 9 of the Nationality Instructions states:
‘The most important criterion is that the child's future should clearly be seen to lie in the UK. A reliable indicator should be the applicant's and/or the family's past behaviour. If that suggests an established way of life in the UK, and we have no reason to think that this will continue, we should accept at face value that the child intends to live here’.
SECTION 3(1) CHAPTER 9.17.24, CHAPTER 9.17.25 AND CHAPTER 9.17.26 OF VOLUME ONE (1) OF THE BRITISH NATIONALITY ACT 1981 ARE AS FOLLOWS:
Conditions of stay
--------------------
9.17.24 We should normally expect a minor to be free of conditions of stay because the future of a child whose stay is restricted does not clearly lie here (see 9.17.2). Registering a minor who is on conditions has the effect of cancelling their conditions because, on becoming a British citizen, the minor would cease to be subject to immigration control.
9.17.25 We should therefore normally refuse an application for the registration of a minor whose stay in the United Kingdom is restricted to a specific period.
9.17.26 But if one or both parents are British citizens who have come to the United Kingdom to live permanently, then this may be less important, if:
a) the minor meets the other normal criteria for registration set out in 9.17; and
b) the parents meet the criteria set out in 9.17.9-9.17.14 above, then we should consider whether registration would be
appropriate.
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... apter9.pdf
HI King,kingascona wrote:Hi Raj,
My information does not contradict with Vinny's in anyway. If your kids were born outside the UK and at the time of their birth none of the parents were British or British descents, then your kids cannot be British by descent or register them under Section 3(2) or Section 3(5). You will have to register them as British citizens under Section 3(1) Chapter 9 of the British Nationality Act 1981.
I am a British by naturalisation and my wife has ILR. My children were born in Ghana and came over here in 2011 on dependant visa, which runs out in June 2014.
You can register your children born outside the UK as British citizens so far as they are under 18, at least one parent is a British and the other parent has ILR, the kids have been in the country for at least 2 years, the parents are married and living together with the kids, the parents or the kids have no criminal records or bad behaviour.
Read the following link of Section 3(1) of the British Nationality Act 1981, if you have similar situation as mine then read: Conditions of stay in Chapter 9.17.24 to Chapter 9.17.26. Children do not necessarily need ILR to be registered under Chapter 9.17.24 to Chapter 9.17.26.
Remember, you cannot register kids as British citizens if both parents have ILR. At least one parent should be a British and the other parent having ILR. Also, if the kids spends more time outside the UK, it can affect their application.
Hi King,kingascona wrote:My first son was born in Ghana 1 year before I even traveled to the UK. My other son was born in Ghana but at the time of his birth, I was settled here (ILR). My wife and the kids moved to the UK in 2011 on a 4 years dependant visa.
My wife got her ILR in October 2013 and then I put my naturalisation in. You can still register your child if your child was born outside the UK and both parents were not settled here at the time of the child's birth; provided one parent is a British and the other has a settled status (ILR).
The laws under Section 3(1) does not require that parents should settled (ILR) here at the time of the child's birth before the child can be registered. Kindly read the link I sent you and refer to Chapter 9.17.24 to Chapter 9.17.26. If the child and the parent meet the requirement, then you can register the child.
They are going to look at whether the future of the child lies here, if they are convinced that the future of the child lies here, then the application will be granted. So if the child is in school or nursery, you should ask the school to provide you with a letter confirming your child's attendance, let the headteacher be a referee one (1) on the application form (MN1), add any evidence that proves your child is in school.
Also, if the child has siblings who are British, you can add their birth certificates and passports to the application. That is to prove that the child has a connection here and therefore his/her future lies here.
But 9.17.26 doesn't apply to your case. You are not a BC who come to live permanently in the UK but a naturalised BC who was living in the UK before becoming British.satish333 wrote:Hi King,kingascona wrote:My first son was born in Ghana 1 year before I even traveled to the UK. My other son was born in Ghana but at the time of his birth, I was settled here (ILR). My wife and the kids moved to the UK in 2011 on a 4 years dependant visa.
My wife got her ILR in October 2013 and then I put my naturalisation in. You can still register your child if your child was born outside the UK and both parents were not settled here at the time of the child's birth; provided one parent is a British and the other has a settled status (ILR).
The laws under Section 3(1) does not require that parents should settled (ILR) here at the time of the child's birth before the child can be registered. Kindly read the link I sent you and refer to Chapter 9.17.24 to Chapter 9.17.26. If the child and the parent meet the requirement, then you can register the child.
They are going to look at whether the future of the child lies here, if they are convinced that the future of the child lies here, then the application will be granted. So if the child is in school or nursery, you should ask the school to provide you with a letter confirming your child's attendance, let the headteacher be a referee one (1) on the application form (MN1), add any evidence that proves your child is in school.
Also, if the child has siblings who are British, you can add their birth certificates and passports to the application. That is to prove that the child has a connection here and therefore his/her future lies here.
I really appreciate your prompt response
This information is quite useful for many people in similar situation. Vinny's reply to my post, states that my children can not be registered unless they granted ILR even after meeting all other criteria which is untrue based on your reference chapter 9.17.26
May god bless you & your family
Raj