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No. The requirements for Section 3(2) are quite specific and you can see them in the link above.Adam_Jones wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2024 9:48 pmCan I pass on under section 3(2) without living in the UK for 3 years with stateless?
Note the difficulties of this approach.4(1)A person born outside the United Kingdom and the British overseas territories after commencement shall be entitled, on an application for his registration under this paragraph, to be so registered if the following requirements are satisfied, namely—
(a)that that person is and always has been stateless; and
(b)that at the time of that person’s birth his father or mother was a citizen or subject of a description mentioned in sub-paragraph (4); and
(c)that that person was in the United Kingdom or a British overseas territory(no matter which) at the beginning of the period of three years ending with the date of the application and that (subject to paragraph 6) the number of days on which he was absent from both the United Kingdom and the British overseas territories in that period does not exceed 270.
You mentioned that your parents migrated from a European country to the UK and naturalised here. That could open routes to citizenship for your child. You may not have a European passport, but you may still have acquired citizenship of one or both your parents automatically. It is not impossible that your child may acquire one or both those citizenships.
Broadly, yes.Adam_Jones wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2024 10:34 pmThe only option for the child having british citizenship on birth is to have the birth in the UK?