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You can read about the kind of international cooperation and data sharing that goes on between EU countries & other countries, including Uzbekistan, here:moulie18 wrote:Hi dear respected forum members.
I recently have a British Citizenship. My country (Uzbekstan) does not support dual nationality.
My question is, Does British Government somehow inform my country about my British Citizenship?
Anyone experienced such type of issue?
Thank you very much.
Kindest regards,
Moulie
Interpol is another agency that, by definition, has international links and tools & procedures for data sharing.Cross-border cooperation and data sharing are strategic areas that require further regional cooperation, confidence-building measures, joint activities and information exchange to prevent identification fraud. A strong message that emerged from this Seminar was the necessity to explore new, more inclusive and more effective forms of regional cooperation and data sharing. This is an important priority.
secret.simon wrote:No, HMG does not notify other states of your acquisition of British citizenship.
But there are other ways to find out.
For instance, my former country (which also does not allow dual citizenship, hence former) had exit checks in place at airports and seaports. Immigration Officers would check that you had a visa for the country you are flying to, else they will question you as to why you did not need a visa. They would also check that you had a entry stamp in the passport, else you would need an exit stamp signed off in advance by your local police station, etc. That causes issues for babies born in that country, whose parents are visiting, because of course the baby does not have an entry stamp on his brand new passport.
Also, as noajthan has pointed out, security data, including passenger flight details, is routinely shared among nations for security purposes. And they almost certainly contain citizenship data.
moulie18 wrote:Thank you Noajthan and Secret.simon.
As long as UK gov.t does not let my country know about my British citizenship, I might get away with flying abroad by flying via Russia, or Kazakhstan... etc.
Fly to Kazakhstan with British Passport... From there, Fly to Uzbekistan with Uzbek Passport..
When exiting, Fly to Kazakhstan with Uzbek passport... From Kazakhstan to UK with British passport..
secret.simon wrote:No, HMG does not notify other states of your acquisition of British citizenship.
But there are other ways to find out.
For instance, my former country (which also does not allow dual citizenship, hence former) had exit checks in place at airports and seaports. Immigration Officers would check that you had a visa for the country you are flying to, else they will question you as to why you did not need a visa. They would also check that you had a entry stamp in the passport, else you would need an exit stamp signed off in advance by your local police station, etc. That causes issues for babies born in that country, whose parents are visiting, because of course the baby does not have an entry stamp on his brand new passport.
Also, as noajthan has pointed out, security data, including passenger flight details, is routinely shared among nations for security purposes. And they almost certainly contain citizenship data.
Wanderer wrote:moulie18 wrote:Thank you Noajthan and Secret.simon.
As long as UK gov.t does not let my country know about my British citizenship, I might get away with flying abroad by flying via Russia, or Kazakhstan... etc.
Fly to Kazakhstan with British Passport... From there, Fly to Uzbekistan with Uzbek Passport..
When exiting, Fly to Kazakhstan with Uzbek passport... From Kazakhstan to UK with British passport..
secret.simon wrote:No, HMG does not notify other states of your acquisition of British citizenship.
But there are other ways to find out.
For instance, my former country (which also does not allow dual citizenship, hence former) had exit checks in place at airports and seaports. Immigration Officers would check that you had a visa for the country you are flying to, else they will question you as to why you did not need a visa. They would also check that you had a entry stamp in the passport, else you would need an exit stamp signed off in advance by your local police station, etc. That causes issues for babies born in that country, whose parents are visiting, because of course the baby does not have an entry stamp on his brand new passport.
Also, as noajthan has pointed out, security data, including passenger flight details, is routinely shared among nations for security purposes. And they almost certainly contain citizenship data.
Then you would need a Russian visa (pain in the arse) or a Kazakh visa (probably also a pain in the arse).
But if you fly out on your British Passport you will need a KZ visa other wise they won't board you.Fly to Kazakhstan with British Passport... From there, Fly to Uzbekistan with Uzbek Passport..
When exiting, Fly to Kazakhstan with Uzbek passport... From Kazakhstan to UK with British passport..