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1. Yes.Marco 72 wrote: 1. Would it be possible for her to use it even though she entered the country as the wife of an EEA citizen?
2. What kind of arguments should one use to persuade a British Embassy that they have to accept such an application? I imagine their first answer is probably going to be a flat no.
3. Before my wife joined me on an EEA Family Permit she spent almost six months here as a tourist (we went to the US to get married, then came back). Would it be possible to include those six months in her residence requirement?
Note that this is not a requirement for section 6(2) applications.mon wrote: I hereby make application for naturalisation as a British citizen under Section 6(2) of the British Nationality Act 1981. I believe that I fulfil the requirements as follows:
....
3. I intend to continue to live in the UK;
Even if she wasn't working, have you got evidence like bank or credit card statements showing activity in the UK.Marco 72 wrote:Thanks JAJ, I had missed your reply earlier. I have managed to convince my wife to apply for British citizenship, so we'll probably give it a shot next year. One potential problem is that we don't have any evidence of her being present in the country apart from her passport, since she didn't work the whole time she was here. However, her passport does get stamped when she enters the UK, so that should be enough.
I see no reason why time as a tourist cannot be included, provided it was lawful.I'm not sure if we'll include the time she spent here as a tourist. In order to avoid potential difficulties we'll probably wait until she has been here for 3 years on her EEA Family Permit and then apply in Dublin.
I opened a joint bank account with my wife as soon as she arrived from the US after our wedding, so that should be ok.JAJ wrote:Even if she wasn't working, have you got evidence like bank or credit card statements showing activity in the UK.
The problem is that we have no way of proving that she was here, apart from the stamp in her passport from February 2005 stating "Leave to enter for six months: employment and recourse to public funds prohibited". I realise now that we should have kept her boarding pass when she went back to the US in June 2005, but we didn't think about it then. The next stamp in the passport is the one on her UK Entry Clearance, dated July 2005. When she was here as a tourist I tried to add her to my bank account but the bank refused.JAJ wrote:I see no reason why time as a tourist cannot be included, provided it was lawful.
The way the method works is that the law doesn't actually state that you need to have ILR in order to apply, all says is that you must be "free from immigration restrictions". If you apply outside the UK you are of course free from [UK] immigration restrictions, since you are not in the UK. However, it wouldn't work for those who are not married to a British citizen, because they are required to have been free from immigration restrictions for a year before they apply.SYH wrote:So the way you avoided the ILR is simply you went to another country and applied. So why cant everyone else do that after 3 if married or 5 if here on work permit??????
Lots of airlines don't put the year on the boarding pass though, on the day and the month. So it might not have helped all that much, except to provide a bit more possible evidence.Marco 72 wrote:I realise now that we should have kept her boarding pass when she went back to the US in June 2005, but we didn't think about it then.
I am a dual British/Italian citizen, and my wife is an American who came over almost two years ago on an EEA Family Permit (I was not a British citizen at the time). In order to apply for citizenship in the UK she would need to obtain ILR first, and this won't be possible until she has spent five years in this country. Having read about the ppron method, which JAJ mentioned in another discussion, I wonder if my wife would qualify for it.