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In general, France does allow dual citizenship but India does not.gokul76 wrote:Thanks for sharing your wisdom. Yes I intend to get British citizenship eventually. I have a few doubts. 1. Does France and India dont allow dual citizenship. I beleive India and france do. So how can I loose Indian citizenship without renouncing?. So if in this case any consideration of ILR years to be reduced?
You lost your Indian citizenship without renouncing it because under Indian citizenship laws anyone who voluntarily aquires the citizenship of another country AUTOMATICALLY loses their Indian citizenship from the moment they aquire the other citizenship.gokul76 wrote:Thanks for sharing your wisdom. Yes I intend to get British citizenship eventually. I have a few doubts. 1. Does France and India dont allow dual citizenship. I beleive India and france do. So how can I loose Indian citizenship without renouncing?. So if in this case any consideration of ILR years to be reduced?
It seems he acquired French citizenship at birth (if he had a French parent) so the point at which he would have lost Indian citizenship would have been when he obtained a French passport.British wrote: If you still not convinced, try entering India with your Indian passport which you are claming to be valid even now, and you will be arrested for committing a criminal offense under the Indian citizenship Act, since they will charge you that you entered Indian borders with an Indian passport that is not valid anymore and you clamined to be an Indian citizen to the Immigration officers when in reality you have lost it the moment you had aquired the French citizenship.
I disagree. If what he has written is correct, then it sounds like he has been a French citizen since birth. According to the instructions on form EEA3 (page 2) studying is a way of exercising Treaty Rights in the UK, so he may well qualify.JAJ wrote:Losing Indian citizenship and becoming French does not in itself affect your UK immigration status. However, your time as a student does not count for ILR except under the 10 year rule.
If you read the poster's original message you will see that he originally entered the UK on an Indian passport with a student visa and only received his French passport THIS year. Therefore he was not exercising his treating rights in the UK and does not qualify for ILR at all since he has only begun exercising his treaty rights this year.Marco 72 wrote:I disagree. If what he has written is correct, then it sounds like he has been a French citizen since birth. According to the instructions on form EEA3 (page 2) studying is a way of exercising Treaty Rights in the UK, so he may well qualify.JAJ wrote:Losing Indian citizenship and becoming French does not in itself affect your UK immigration status. However, your time as a student does not count for ILR except under the 10 year rule.