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You would have to apply for the child to be registered as British under section 3(1) of the British Nationality Act.pennylessinindia wrote:I am British (all relatives British) Living in India married to an Indian. married over 4 yrs. we are looking into adopting. If we have a child of my own here the child will be able to have a British P Port etc however It appears from what I have read on line that is not the case if we adopt here and stay here after the adoption?
thanks
Firstly it looks like India has signed up to the Hague Convention on Intercountry Adoption.pennylessinindia wrote:It would seem that India has signed up to the convention
But all the information in the British Nationality Act makes reference to adoption and person resident in the UK
pennylessinindia wrote:I was born in the UK.
The link you gave is very interesting and similar to other information however it remains unclear as India has signed hague but is not on the list of designated countries "• Adoptions in non-designated countries, and which are not Hague Convention adoptions, are not recognised in UK law." 9.8.4
As far as I can tell, it's ok if the adoption is either in a designated country OR is a fully compliant "Hague" adoption. Do all Indian adoptions fall into this category?pennylessinindia wrote:According to the list India is not designated but signed Hague???
Where do they say that? It doesn't make sense.Further in the guidance it suggests that children may be better off waiting til they go to the UK and gain citizenship Via ILE route is that a "better" way to gain citizenship?
It doesn't matter where you apply for citizenship. What matters is the clause under the British Nationality Act 1981.pennylessinindia wrote: Sorry my second part was not clear it come from the guidance issued on citizenship of children acquired overseas. My understanding ( which could be very wrong) is that after adoption in India I could apply for citizenship given the either or route but the child would have it by decent but If we waited til we settle back in the UK it would be otherwise than decent and would allow the child in the future to pass on citizehsip if it moved from the UK but the first way done in India would not?
It doesn't matter where you apply for citizenship. What matters is the clause under the British Nationality Act 1981.
So most children adopted overseas and registered under s3(1) get British citizenship otherwise than by descent.
As far as I can tell the provisions for automatic acquisition of citizenship by adoption only apply to those resident in the U.K.
Yes - if registered under s3(1) and neither natural parent is British at the time of birth.pennylessinindia wrote: So does that mean that a child adopted in India can pass on citizenship if he or she has his own children and does not live in the UK
A child under 18 cannot be naturalised, so in adoption cases where the automatic provisions of section 1(5) of the Act don't apply, registration under s3(1) is the only way. Doesn't matter if the child is living in the U.K. or elsewhere.If we return to the UK but have not acquired citizenship in India and then apply for the naturlasiaton route will the child then by able to pass on citizenship if he or she returns to India..