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My husband is Australian. Just looked at the copy of his passport and it clearly is written 7 Feb 03. No stamp, just the cert. We speculate that they are checking out the validity through the UK govt in London and are just not saying it. I can understand... I guess.yankeegirl wrote:What nationality is your husband?
That is completely wrong. If he has a Right of Abode stamp in his passport then he has an unqualified right to enter the United Kingdom. And that is enough to sponsor for a spouse visa.blaatgirl wrote:Walked into Los Angeles today with all my carefully organized documents (and I cannot emphasise organization is essential!) Handed over my passport, his passport, marriage cert, divorce decree and the other requested things. She hunted around his passport and said "where is his evidence of residency?" I said, well you have our lease agreement there. She said, "No, I mean, there is no stamp in his passport indicating he has entered the country." He has right of abode and that cert is clearly on the appropriate page. I waivered and said, I dont know, he goes through the British line and gets his iris scanned. He never gets a stamp.
She said not to worry, and processed all the other things and had me take a seat. I waited about 10 minutes and was called into an interview room. The ECM proceeded to explain that just becasue he has the certificate that does not assure residency.
Well, if that's the case, I wonder why the ECM wouldn't know that. In any case, hopefully the OP gets a positive phone call tomorrow!That is completely wrong. If he has a Right of Abode stamp in his passport then he has an unqualified right to enter the United Kingdom. And that is enough to sponsor for a spouse visa.
His mother is British born and he was born 1972 in Australia, qualifying his ROA. He did the miles of paperwork as well. They say "We dont know that he is actually in the UK now." WHAT? Did you not see our Letting Agreement signed and dated 27 May 07? Did you not see the sticker on the back of the passport from Air Canada (along with the mirads of Virgin Atlantinc ones) that say LAX - London. His employment contract, letter from said employer and his previous BT bills in his name from 2 residences within 7 years?JAJ wrote:That is completely wrong. If he has a Right of Abode stamp in his passport then he has an unqualified right to enter the United Kingdom. And that is enough to sponsor for a spouse visa.blaatgirl wrote:Walked into Los Angeles today with all my carefully organized documents (and I cannot emphasise organization is essential!) Handed over my passport, his passport, marriage cert, divorce decree and the other requested things. She hunted around his passport and said "where is his evidence of residency?" I said, well you have our lease agreement there. She said, "No, I mean, there is no stamp in his passport indicating he has entered the country." He has right of abode and that cert is clearly on the appropriate page. I waivered and said, I dont know, he goes through the British line and gets his iris scanned. He never gets a stamp.
She said not to worry, and processed all the other things and had me take a seat. I waited about 10 minutes and was called into an interview room. The ECM proceeded to explain that just becasue he has the certificate that does not assure residency.
How did he get Right of Abode? Did he have a British born mother? And is he also a U.S. citizen?
If the Consulate staff can't bring themselves to understand this then you will be justified in making a high level complaint to UK Visas management.
Firstly, a person who "will be admitted for settlement in the UK when arriving there, and intends permanent settlement in the United Kingdom." is eligible to sponsor for a spouse visa.blaatgirl wrote: His mother is British born and he was born 1972 in Australia, qualifying his ROA.
He is not a US citizen, only Australian and he has lived in the UK for almost 10 years ont ROA. He was not sure if he wanted to register as a British Citizen, but has recently decided to go ahead with it.JAJ wrote:Firstly, a person who "will be admitted for settlement in the UK when arriving there, and intends permanent settlement in the United Kingdom." is eligible to sponsor for a spouse visa.blaatgirl wrote: His mother is British born and he was born 1972 in Australia, qualifying his ROA.
This comes straight from the Diplomatic Service Procedures on Entry Clearance (chapter 13), available on http://www.ukvisas.gov.uk
Is your husband aware that he is entitled to register as a British citizen (by descent) under new rules, introduced in 2003? That would shorten your waiting time for naturalisation.
Also, is he a U.S. citizen (as well as Australian), or just a green card holder? If he just has a green card, has he thought about becoming a U.S. citizen before he moves to Britain?
Is he going to register as a British citizen based on his mother, or apply for naturalisation based on his residence in the UK?blaatgirl wrote: He was not sure if he wanted to register as a British Citizen, but has recently decided to go ahead with it.
This is what we discussed, and he does want the dual citizenship. Seeing as we do not want children, there is no issue of such issues in our future. He told me taht I would be eligible as well after 3 years. We just want to get over this first hurdle, then we will tackle the citizenship/naturalization situation.JAJ wrote:Is he going to register as a British citizen based on his mother, or apply for naturalisation based on his residence in the UK?blaatgirl wrote: He was not sure if he wanted to register as a British Citizen, but has recently decided to go ahead with it.
One difference is that naturalisation makes him British "otherwise than by descent" which could benefit future children you have born outside the UK.
Since 4 April 2002, he is not subject to loss of Australian citizenship upon becoming British.
Bear in mind that assuming he becomes a British citizen, you will be eligible for British citizenship by naturalisation yourself after 3 years in the UK. You will not lose your American citizenship provided you intend to retain it. (in other words, keep a valid American passport and keep filing US federal taxes).