Post
by genorp » Sun Oct 30, 2011 4:32 pm
As far as the Cayman Islands, I doubt it since British Overseas Territories Citizens still have to be resident in the UK proper to register for British citizenship.
The time between your visa and entering the country... Interesting math, but no. Think about it, why would they deduct time out of the country from time out of the country? Only in grammar does a double-negative work that way. That gap, if less than 3 months, can be discounted if the applicant is short of a continuous 5 year period because they didn't specify a later date for the visa to start and entered after the start date. For example the visa was issued from January 2006 to January 2011 and the applicant entered the country in the middle of March. If they counted 5 years from March they would need an extension. Absences within that 5 year period are treated separately, and that's what your gap is. An absence inside the period irrespective of your entry date.
As Lucapooka points out, you may be eligible for ILR based on 10 years 2015, which is the same year based on ancestry with the presumed restart on 29 April, 2010. For 10 years you're allowed up to 6 months break if when you left you had valid leave to remain, which you did. [from Paragraph 276(a) of the immigration rules, under Long Residence.] However from having re-entered 29 April, 2010, your ancestry 5 year qualification will predate your 10 year long residence qualification by a couple months in 2015. But as your current leave expires 7 September, 2014, you'll need an extension to reach either date in 2015.
Anyway, that's what I think based on your given information. I'd be interested to see if anyone else sees another way.