vinny wrote:CR001 wrote:they are of no use now.
Unless you had children born in the UK after you were granted ILR and before your naturalisation.
Can someone clarify this point for me? I'm in exactly this position at the moment. My application for naturalisation is currently lodged (I applied last week). I used the NCS so I've still got the original BRP with me. However, I've just had a baby daughter last month and we want to get her a passport as soon as possible.
As I understand it, I *MUST* send the physical BRP card as proof of my ILR as part of the passport application form, is that right? I can't use a certified copy of it? So for the 3+ weeks or so that it takes them to process the application, I will have no BRP and therefore should not travel? This is not an issue as we had no plans to travel, but I just wanted to clarify.
And once the passport is granted to my baby daughter, will I have any further need to prove my ILR status with regards to her? I understand that once I am granted citizenship, I will have to return the BRP, but at a later stage, if I again needed to prove that I was a permanent resident in the UK at the time of my daughter's birth, I would no longer have any proof. My citizenship was not granted until after the time of her birth, so I would be in a sort of paperwork limbo where I would have no lasting proof of my status at the time of her birth? Given the birth certificate itself does not prove that she has British parents, I understand that her passport will be the primary method of proving her British nationality, but for example, what if she loses it? What proof of citizenship could we use to prove her British nationality if the birth certificate doesn't prove it, and I no longer have proof that I had ILR at the time of her birth? Sorry for the large number of questions in one post, but I can see some potential for confusion down the track on this issue.
Thanks,
David