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Jambo wrote:Parents marriage certificate is not required in her case (I know it is listed in the notes but it is for cases the British citizenship was derived from your parents not naturalisation).
I would thought she will be called for an interview in Italy. She is not supposed to be able to travel if she doesn't have a passport... (not everyone is dual national).severnaya wrote:Thanks! She can't take so much time off work, so I think she will have to apply from Italy. That means the regional processing centre in Paris. Any idea if they will call her to Paris for an interview, and how much warning she would get?
Not that I'm aware of but FCO (who issue the passport abroad) is sometimes different in doing things compared to IPS (who issue the passport in the UK) so you might want to call the (slightly expensive) advice line.Is it published anywhere that she doesn't need her parents' marriage certificate? I completely agree with you that it's irrelevant, but we don't want to risk a delay or refusal.
I would think a passport is enough. Maybe also a UK driving license. I don't know why a passport is not listed there (although it is listed in the "if born abroad after 1983" section). Maybe they didn't considered dual nationals.The C1 notes also say "Photocopy of your current ID" is required, and give a list of examples that doesn't include a foreign passport. The official IDs she will have at that point are: Kazakhstani passport, UK ILR card, UK driving licence, Italian residence card, Soviet birth certificate. Would you suggest including (translated and notarised) copies of all of them?
Jambo wrote:I would thought she will be called for an interview in Italy. She is not supposed to be able to travel if she doesn't have a passport... (not everyone is dual national).
But if she didn't have a KZ citizenship (and passport) and was applying for first time British passport, that would mean she doesn't have a travel document to travel to France.severnaya wrote:Unless I'm reading it wrong, the notes only seem to call for photocopies of ID when you apply from abroad. So she would keep her KZ passport and IT residence card, and with those she can go to France.
Jambo wrote:But if she didn't have a KZ citizenship (and passport) and was applying for first time British passport, that would mean she doesn't have a travel document to travel to France.
Jambo wrote:Get born in Italy to a British parent?
I very much doubt that.severnaya wrote:Someone who spent their whole life in Italy would qualify for naturalisation there, AFAIK.
A quite famous case is Nouriel Roubini.aledeniz wrote: I personally know someone who was born in Italy and lived there until she was 16, and she never qualified. She actually never come close to qualify.