bbdivo. I note that IND page you quoted has updated itself to refer to "spouse/civil partner", but hasn't yet cottoned on to the fact that the Inland Revenue is now HM Revenue and Customs
Domicile has most impact when you are talking about inheritance tax when someone dies. Even if that person is a British citizen, if their domicile is not the UK, then inheritance tax will not be payable on certain assets not in the UK at the time of death. Unlike a Biritsh citizen who is domiciled in the UK, who WOULD be so taxed.
Oh, and remember the cricket test?
Mohamed Abdel Moneim Fayed (he only styles himself Mohamed al-Fayed) was born in Egypt. Remember, he made his money when he married the sister of the international arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, who employed him in his import business in Saudi Arabia. Maybe that goes against him (it shouldn't).
However, he was involved in the cash for questions scandal, and more importantly -
. Rowland of Lonrho took the Al-Fayeds to a Department of Trade inquiry (as we know, in 1979 al-Fayed bought the H?tel Ritz Paris and in 1985 he and his brother Ali bought Harrod's for £615m). This inquiry reported in 1990 and stated that the brothers had lied about their background and wealth. The bickering with Rowland continued when he accused them of stealing millions in jewels from his Harrods safe deposit box. Rowland died and al-Fayed settled the dispute with a payment to his widow. Al-Fayed had been arrested during the dispute and sued the Metropolitan Police for false arrest in 2002. He lost the case.
So, both Labour and Conservative Home Secs continued to deny Brit citizenship to Mohamed on the grounds that he was not of good character.
Since leaving the UK in 2003, I think he must have given up on the idea of Brit citizenship, and from the Brit point of view, there will be residency gaps now. Anyway, I think he has a UAE passport now, and, by the way, some say he has "moved" from Switzerland to Monaco.
Hey, but because of his status in the UK when he had his children, they are British, I believe (goes directly to the point I made earlier in this post if you have a look - the fact he has children who, I think, are British citizens - was/is irrelevant in his quest for Brit citizenship). However, his second wife was/is Finnish. If he's still married to her - can someone update?- then she can get residence in the UK leading to Brit citizenship, leading to Al-Fayed's eligibility.
Question - do questions of good character - which can lead to refusal of Brit citizenship - apply right across the board - ie even to spouses of British citizens?