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Yeah I read that, I'd be applying under MN1 and it would cost too much, hell, £1400 is a lot of money on its own and my parents are old lowskill workers, hopefully it turns out okay.vinny wrote:It may be easier if you have confirmation of PR and at least one of your parents is also applying for citizenship too.
See also Discretionary registration of children as British.
By default they would keep it until they make a decision on your application, unless you explicitly request it to be returned earlier.mantoszczak wrote:Does anyone know if they keep your passport for 6ish months if you don't go for NCS?
I'm become weary of this section of the guide. "We expect either both parents to be British citizens or one parent a British citizen and the other parent settled in the UK".It is not possible to cover all circumstances under which the Home Secretary might
exercise discretion in circumstances not already described in this guide. However,
in considering any application not specifically covered above consideration will be
given to
The child’s connections with the UK – we would expect the child to be free
of any restrictions on his or her stay in the UK
Where the child’s future is likely to lie
The parents’ views
The parents’ nationality and immigration status – we expect either both parents
to be British citizens or one parent a British citizen and the other parent settled
in the UK.
Whether the child is of good character
The length of time the child has lived in the UK – we expect at least 2 years
residence (particularly if the child is over the age of 13)
Any compelling circumstances such as a job offer or other opportunity which
requires British citizenship.
This too.3.1 Please say which parent is the one who is a British citizen by descent and on whom this application is based.
Mother Q Father Q
Can anyone help me with this section too? Who is my best person to contact about this? On a personal level, does anyone have experiences with this? I mean, did you get a teacher involved or/and a family friend over the age of 25 who has a british passport? I'm really feeling awkward about this part especially and I'd appreciate your experiences with this section.The application must be endorsed by two referees and a recent passport size
photograph. You must write the child’s name and date of birth on the back of the
photograph and this should then be glued or pasted into the space provided on the
application form.
The photograph must show the whole of the front of the child’s face in reasonable
light. It should not show the face wholly or partly concealed by hair (beards, sideburns
and moustaches excepted) or by a scarf or traditional dress. It should not show the
child wearing dark glasses or a hat, hood, cap or scarf.
One referee should be a professional who has engaged with the child in a
professional capacity, such as a teacher, health visitor, social worker or minister of
religion. The other referee must normally be the holder of a British citizen passport
and either a professional person or over the age of 25.
Each referee should know the child personally and should be:
not related to the child
not related to the other referee
not acting as a solicitor or agent in connection with this application
not employed by the Home Office
We will not accept a referee who has been convicted of an imprisonable offence
during the last 10 unless that conviction can be disregarded in line with the table
shown on page 23 of this Guide.
mantoszczak wrote:I'm become weary of this section of the guide. "We expect either both parents to be British citizens or one parent a British citizen and the other parent settled in the UK".
I'm looking at the MN1 guide and the only issue is I don't seem to fit into any category here. Both of my parents are EEA nationals, but neither of them are British citizens. We are all settled (naturally so, as we are EEA nationals who have lived in the UK for 9 years and exercised rights to healthcare, education, employment(parents) and movement(holidays). Can anyone clarify this section for me?
Do take the time to read what they expect from the applicants.
Pernament residency card looks exactly the same but in the place where on yours say 'registration certificate' on PR card says 'pernament resident' or something to that effect.mantoszczak wrote:UPDATE:
I need to know if what I have is a PR card. It's a blue 6 paged small document that states: UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND (Home Office Logo) UK RESIDENCE DOCUMENTATION FOR A NATIONAL OF AN EEA STATE.
Inside there is a RESIDENCE DOCUMENTATION watermarked sticker with my name, date of issue, passport photo etc. but a blank space for Document Renewal Date and Remarks. Type of Document: REGISTRATION CERTIFICATE. It looks the same as googling UK PR card, but just incase there's common misconceptions or anything I wanted to ask.
Thanks.
If you're an EEA national and your parents are EEA nationals why didn't you just apply for a Permanent Residence Card instead to prove that you're a permanent resident? I'm sure the EEA(QP) Form that you used and sent off is only for people who just arrived in the UK, as long as in those 9-years you've been a student and dependent on your working mother/father you automatically qualify for permanent residence after 5 years of continuous stay.mantoszczak wrote:UPDATE:
I need to know if what I have is a PR card. It's a blue 6 paged small document that states: UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND (Home Office Logo) UK RESIDENCE DOCUMENTATION FOR A NATIONAL OF AN EEA STATE.
Inside there is a RESIDENCE DOCUMENTATION watermarked sticker with my name, date of issue, passport photo etc. but a blank space for Document Renewal Date and Remarks. Type of Document: REGISTRATION CERTIFICATE. It looks the same as googling UK PR card, but just incase there's common misconceptions or anything I wanted to ask.
Thanks.
It's quite straightforward.mantoszczak wrote:Can anyone help me with this section too? Who is my best person to contact about this? On a personal level, does anyone have experiences with this? I mean, did you get a teacher involved or/and a family friend over the age of 25 who has a british passport? I'm really feeling awkward about this part especially and I'd appreciate your experiences with this section.The application must be endorsed by two referees and a recent passport size
photograph. You must write the child’s name and date of birth on the back of the
photograph and this should then be glued or pasted into the space provided on the
application form.
The photograph must show the whole of the front of the child’s face in reasonable
light. It should not show the face wholly or partly concealed by hair (beards, sideburns
and moustaches excepted) or by a scarf or traditional dress. It should not show the
child wearing dark glasses or a hat, hood, cap or scarf.
One referee should be a professional who has engaged with the child in a
professional capacity, such as a teacher, health visitor, social worker or minister of
religion. The other referee must normally be the holder of a British citizen passport
and either a professional person or over the age of 25.
Each referee should know the child personally and should be:
not related to the child
not related to the other referee
not acting as a solicitor or agent in connection with this application
not employed by the Home Office
We will not accept a referee who has been convicted of an imprisonable offence
during the last 10 unless that conviction can be disregarded in line with the table
shown on page 23 of this Guide.
mantoszczak wrote:Is there a difference?