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Whats the point of having OCI if we are being treated as NRIs. Also the only rule explicitly mentioned for OCI is cannot vote and canoot buy agricultural land. Other institution cannot come up with their own rule.need_a_tier1 wrote:Also, if you have children and they also hold british citizenship - in most case they will not be eligible to write competitive examinations (engineering, medical entrance exams), NTSE etc. and will have to follow the admission rules for NRIs.
From my experience, that isn't looked down upon or frowned upon in India. These rules were mostly intended for PIOs who in some cases have never been to India in all their life, but does cover NRIs (read former Indian citizens with overseas citizenship).gainvidya wrote:Whats the point of having OCI if we are being treated as NRIs.
If you already own a land, it is okay- nobody can force you to sell.VijP wrote:TC, Does anybody respond to your question(below)? I have the same question.
I already own agricultural land and I have no intention of selling it. Does anyone know what happens? I thought you cannot buy but you can keep the lands you already own??
Can you please also suggest if you acquire british citizenship and subsequently also get OCI but you inherit the agriculture land after getting OCI. Does it affect any aspect of your ownership or you cannot inherit it?chakku71 wrote:If you already own a land, it is okay- nobody can force you to sell.VijP wrote:TC, Does anybody respond to your question(below)? I have the same question.
I already own agricultural land and I have no intention of selling it. Does anyone know what happens? I thought you cannot buy but you can keep the lands you already own??
There are restrictions in admission to educational institutions for children. They may be able to compete in a common entrance/exam but can only gain access through the NRI quota which attracts more fees.
The most important catch is that children cannot gain Indian citizenship until they are 18!!