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Residential requirements
To demonstrate the residential requirements for naturalisation you need to:
have been resident in the United Kingdom for at least five years (this is known as the residential qualifying period); and
have been present in the United Kingdom five years before the date of your application; and
have not spent more than 450 days outside the United Kingdom during the five year period; and
have not spend more than 90 days outside the United Kingdom in the last 12 months of the five-year period; and
have not been in breach of the immigration rules at any stage during the five-year period.
The situation also depends on your age - if the majority of your time in the UK (as an overstayer) was as a child, then you might be able to apply after holding ILR for the standard one year, whilst proving that, as a child, you did not knowingly breach the immigration rules.Breach of immigration laws during residential qualifying period
You must have been in the United Kingdom legally throughout the residential qualifying period. We may refuse your naturalisation application if you have breached the immigration laws during the residential qualifying period.
If you came to the United Kingdom as an asylum applicant, you would be considered in breach of the immigration rules if your application for refugee status and any appeals were refused during the residential qualifying period. You would also be in breach of the immigration rules if you entered the United Kingdom illegally and obtained refugee status during the residential qualifying period.
I am not an expert on this, I'm just pointing out the rules. You have just mentioned that you applied for asylum and it, along with any appeals you made, was refused. Therefore, wouldn't the point above about asylum applicants be relevant for you? When you applied for asylum, you were not in breach of immigration rules, but once you lost your appeal/s, you became an overstayer.paloma2k2 wrote:Thanks for the reply.
Well I came to England in 1992, I was 11 years old. I am now 26. It was with my parents and 2 elder brothers. We have not been outside of the UK since we got here in 1992.
We did not enter the UK illegaly. Came on a 6 months visa and then decided to stay. Our application for asylum was rejected about 10 years ago. After that there was no correspondence from the HO regarding our status. We just carried on as normal, working and paying our taxes and even voting. Made an application using a 'SET O' form for ILR under the long term rule in August 2007. Like I have mentioned before it was granted a week ago.
Our solicitor said we will be able to apply for naturalisation after one year. I do not understand what you mean by 'five years' legal residency'. Does that mean five years from the time the ILR was issued?
Have I missed something?Siggi wrote:Sakura,
You see Paloma's case is typical of the unfair manner the HO treat's people who do things legally ie pay taxes and visa costs.
As a overstayer under case resolution, she would has been given ILR for no fee or Britishness test and she will be able to apply in one years time for Naturalisation on condition she completes her UK test.
Personally I'm pleased that Paloma now has her ILR, but I don't agree with people been rewarded for been illagaly.
Siggi wrote:Sakura,
Personally I'm pleased that Paloma now has her ILR, but I don't agree with people been rewarded for been illagaly.