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Yes, you are.gofornaturalisation wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 3:07 pmam I placing an unnecessary risk on my citizenship by doing so?
Hi secret.simon, thanks for your quick response. Yes I do remember you mentioning those 2 cases in another of my posts actually, admittedly I didn't appreciate that they could very easily apply the same scrutiny to my scenario, so that's useful advice, thank you.secret.simon wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 3:16 pmYes, you are.gofornaturalisation wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 3:07 pmam I placing an unnecessary risk on my citizenship by doing so?
There have been two reported cases on these forums of first British passport applications being submitted from overseas, after a successful naturalisation ceremony in the UK, triggering a review of whether the already granted naturalisation was fraudulently or misleadingly granted, due to violating the "future intentions" requirement.
Asking a naturalisation ceremony to be carried out overseas will almost certainly trigger the same scrutiny and easier to do, as you are not yet a British citizen.
Thank you for the link and quick response alterhase58alterhase58 wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 3:14 pmYou may be ok for when UK ceremonies restart - also I expect that most overseas embassies and consulates are not doing ceremonies either.
Note the link:
british-citizenship/citizenship-ceremon ... 99727.html
Life is about the choices we make. Had the child been born in the UK, it would have been born a British citizen (as you would likely have held ILR at the time of their birth).gofornaturalisation wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 3:25 pmI guess I'll have to pay up more money to eventually have my child be granted their citizenship too, that's rather sad and frustrating but hey ho, at least we're all safe.