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Accepted but I still don't understand the need for citizenship revocation. What purpose does it serve that can't be serve by the normal 'law of the land' ?ppron747 wrote:1. You don't have to be British to go to the law
2. In any case, deprivation cannot happen without the person being given due notice. When they do, they seek legal advice, if they're sensible. They then seek judicial review, which stays the hand of the Home Secretary until the courts have reached a decision.
Well I suppose that, for naturalised/registered people, it would unmake whatever decision that was made that resulted in their becoming British and enable them to be deported to where they originally came from, so they're no longer able to do whatever they're doing from within the UK.lemess wrote:Accepted but I still don't understand the need for citizenship revocation. What purpose does it serve that can't be serve by the normal 'law of the land' ?
But I think we'll have to agree to differ on this particular issue, then....lemess wrote:Accepted but I still don't understand the need for citizenship revocation. What purpose does it serve that can't be serve by the normal 'law of the land' ?