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They are not stateless.kanswam wrote:Hi
I had recently acquired my ILR and looking to register my 2 children born in the UK for British Citizenship. All along I was under the impression that I need to fill out MN1 form but reading the guide for that has confused me. It said,
...
Appreciate if the experts can throw some light on this. I have an appointment at NCS centre tomorrow, so a quick response would go a long way in saving me some money.
cheers
I hope you told the agent your nationality, because the answer depends on the nationality of the parents. For example, the children of Australians born outside Australia isn't born Australian and the child of British citizens born outside the UK isn't necessarily born British.kanswam wrote:I was on the phone just now with the Home Office and essentially the agent said the same thing as Noajthan.
Please try not to confuse the issue. HO is does not have authority on other nationalities and laws. If the OP is say Indian, the child is Indian, same as parents. The child is not stateless but can be registered as BC if born in the UK once parents have ILR, which is what is being asked.Richard W wrote:I hope you told the agent your nationality, because the answer depends on the nationality of the parents. For example, the children of Australians born outside Australia isn't born Australian and the child of British citizens born outside the UK isn't necessarily born British.kanswam wrote:I was on the phone just now with the Home Office and essentially the agent said the same thing as Noajthan.
However, HO's interpretation of the foreign nationality laws may be different from the foreign country's interpretation.CR001 wrote:HO is does not have authority on other nationalities and laws.