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Any thoughts on above pleaseeemego_1980 wrote:My wife will get her settlement on January 2014 so she will apply for naturalization on January 2015. My question is , she is pregnant at the moment and her due date will be on July 2015.
I know for fact that she can't stay outside UK for more than 90 days in last year but she wants to go to her country so, her mum look after her. I don't know if it is possible to stay more than 90 days in last year before Naturalization?
Your help would be greatly appreciated.
upto 100 days disregardedmego_1980 wrote:Any thoughts on above pleaseeemego_1980 wrote:My wife will get her settlement on January 2014 so she will apply for naturalization on January 2015. My question is , she is pregnant at the moment and her due date will be on July 2015.
I know for fact that she can't stay outside UK for more than 90 days in last year but she wants to go to her country so, her mum look after her. I don't know if it is possible to stay more than 90 days in last year before Naturalization?
Your help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks for your reply.forbc123 wrote:
upto 100 days disregarded
Thanks Amber but they didn't mention absence due to special circumstances so that means she has to stay in UK during her pregnancy. Please correct me if I am wrong.D4109125 wrote:See also, Discretion on absences from the UK during the residential qualifying period.
This is for my wife. I am British citizen. She entered UK on 5th Feb 2012 and she will apply for ILR on Jan 2014 and Naturalization on Jan 2015.D4109125 wrote:What is your immigration status, British otherwise than by descent? When did your wife enter the UK?
She could either make an application at discretion (with 120-150 days of absence) or wait 9 months and apply then (with 3 months of absence in the last year).mego_1980 wrote:Thanks Amber but they didn't mention absence due to special circumstances so that means she has to stay in UK during her pregnancy. Please correct me if I am wrong.D4109125 wrote:See also, Discretion on absences from the UK during the residential qualifying period.
Thanks for your answers and advises.Jambo wrote:She could either make an application at discretion (with 120-150 days of absence) or wait 9 months and apply then (with 3 months of absence in the last year).mego_1980 wrote:Thanks Amber but they didn't mention absence due to special circumstances so that means she has to stay in UK during her pregnancy. Please correct me if I am wrong.D4109125 wrote:See also, Discretion on absences from the UK during the residential qualifying period.
Hi Mego_1980,mego_1980 wrote:My wife will get her settlement on January 2014 so she will apply for naturalization on January 2015. My question is , she is pregnant at the moment and her due date will be on July 2015.
I know for fact that she can't stay outside UK for more than 90 days in last year but she wants to go to her country so, her mum look after her. I don't know if it is possible to stay more than 90 days in last year before Naturalization?
Your help would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you all for your answers.tesia85 wrote:Hi Mego_1980,mego_1980 wrote:My wife will get her settlement on January 2014 so she will apply for naturalization on January 2015. My question is , she is pregnant at the moment and her due date will be on July 2015.
I know for fact that she can't stay outside UK for more than 90 days in last year but she wants to go to her country so, her mum look after her. I don't know if it is possible to stay more than 90 days in last year before Naturalization?
Your help would be greatly appreciated.
I applied a few weeks ago with 110 abences due to giving birth abroad. I haven't got the answer yet but you can follow my timeline in the October thread (page 13).
Eligibility criteria: Spouse of BC (5.5 years exercising EEA treaty rights - no PR card), 110 absences in the last 12 months
Method of application: Postal
Date of application: 9 October 2013
Date of receipt by UKBA: 10 October 2013 (tracked)
Date of acknowledgement : 01 November 2013
Date of debit of fees: 30 October 2013
Date of approval:
Date of Ceremony:
I have sent them my MAT B1 form and a letter from my employer confirming that i was on maternity leave.mego_1980 wrote: What documents did you send to support your absence?
Could you send me any links to successful cases with long absence due to pregnancy?tesia85 wrote:I have sent them my MAT B1 form and a letter from my employer confirming that i was on maternity leave.mego_1980 wrote: What documents did you send to support your absence?
Thanks Just Wondering,Just Wondering wrote:Have a look at the form that your wife will need to submit when she applies. It most likely will change a bit between now and application, but the basics will most likely stay the same.
There is a box on the form (at the moment, it's the box before signature) which asks for further information if the applicant (i.e. your wife) does not meet all the requirements. In this box, the applicant should set out that they are requesting discretion and on what requirement they are requesting discretion. Further fill out why discretion should be given bearing in mind the grounds for them to exercise discretion to waive absences between 101-180 days (set out in the link above).
To my mind, pregnancy isn't a "special circumstance" - being posted abroad for Crown Service is. You can choose where to have a baby.
However, explain the situation and include information to demonstrate that she met the long qualifying period (e.g. no absences over 270 days over the previous 3 years) and that she has a demonstrable link to the UK (e.g. home, family, estate are in the UK).
That is just my 2 cents.
There is only one law to apply for BC regardless if you are European or not so there is nothing to switch to.ohojska wrote:First of all congratulations for you successful story Tesia85.
I know it's not fully related with the topic of your post but should I understand that your situation is a proof that even you was in UK for over 5 years under the European law, once it was more convenient for you, you just switched to apply for BC under the UK law?