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As a person born in Kenya in 1914, your grandfather was British by birth. He became a Citizen of the UK & Colonies (CUKC) on 1 January 1949. Most likely, he would have retained CUKC status on Kenya independence in 1963.ubugger wrote:My basic story goes like:
My grandpa was born in Kenya in 1914 - His parents (at least his mother, we don't know anything about his father) was born in India (Damon? 1882)... We are fairly certain that Grandpa has/used to work for the British government in india/afghanistan at certain stages, even the BBC at once stage. (I am still fairly sure he was a british citizen, *somehow*)
My dad was born in Bombay, India, 1952, and they all immigrated to Australia in 1963.
Damn. Ok, I'll give up then!JAJ wrote:For the ancestry visa, that makes no difference.ubugger wrote:Does it matter that he may have worked for the british government, i.e. maybe he was a genuine british citizen (i.e. not born there, but he had to take it up to work for them?) I think this happened about 1930's sometime...
No help whatsoever to "ubugger", but in fact Kenya Colony wasn't founded until July 1920, so it's not clear that his grandfather would even have been a British subject - unless he could show legitimate descent from a BS father...JAJ wrote:As a person born in Kenya in 1914, your grandfather was British by birth. He became a Citizen of the UK & Colonies (CUKC) on 1 January 1949....
From what I was told by the Kenyan consulate today here in Australia was that people born in Kenya (even in those days) assumed the nationality of their parents, not of Kenya. So that would mean his parents (at least one was born in india) would have to have been english... Funny enough, my surname is an evolution of "Smith".... Which is highly odd for an indian I would have thought!ppron747 wrote:No help whatsoever to "ubugger", but in fact Kenya Colony wasn't founded until July 1920, so it's not clear that his grandfather would even have been a British subject - unless he could show legitimate descent from a BS father...JAJ wrote:As a person born in Kenya in 1914, your grandfather was British by birth. He became a Citizen of the UK & Colonies (CUKC) on 1 January 1949....
British - not English...ubugger wrote:From what I was told by the Kenyan consulate today here in Australia was that people born in Kenya (even in those days) assumed the nationality of their parents, not of Kenya. So that would mean his parents (at least one was born in india) would have to have been english...
Oops, that's what I meant!! British. Let's just say the surname is "very" Irish or British, it's a hyphenated surname... And I don't know how common it is in Ireland, but the only other person i've found with this surname is in Ireland.ppron747 wrote: British - not English...
And that would apply only if your great-grandfather was born in British India - there were between six and seven hundred Indian Princely (or "Native") States, which were not British territory, and people born in one of those states were not British subjects by birth.
I had assumed that there would have been provisions to give British subject status to persons already born in a newly acquired colony (eg the annexation provisions), but a read of the Nationality Instructions suggests not.ppron747 wrote:No help whatsoever to "ubugger", but in fact Kenya Colony wasn't founded until July 1920, so it's not clear that his grandfather would even have been a British subject
There was no such thing as a Kenyan citizen before 12 December 1963. Any person born in the Colony of Kenya (other than diplomats) definitely acquired Citizenship of the UK & Colonies at birth (CUKC).ubugger wrote: From what I was told by the Kenyan consulate today here in Australia was that people born in Kenya (even in those days) assumed the nationality of their parents, not of Kenya. So that would mean his parents (at least one was born in india) would have to have been english.
My own view is that, given that an ancient claim to British nationality can in certain circumstances give a person a claim to Kenyan citizenship, the Kenyan Consulate has every right to comment on previous laws.JAJ wrote:There was no such thing as a Kenyan citizen before 12 December 1963. Any person born in the Colony of Kenya (other than diplomats) definitely acquired Citizenship of the UK & Colonies at birth (CUKC).ubugger wrote: From what I was told by the Kenyan consulate today here in Australia was that people born in Kenya (even in those days) assumed the nationality of their parents, not of Kenya. So that would mean his parents (at least one was born in india) would have to have been english.
So it's not clear why the consulate sees fit to comment on the law as it predated independence.