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For arrival/landing via ship start here:GoonerT wrote:Has anyone got any angle we could try from? Or would there be any record of his mom landing in England in 1960?
Thanks
GoonerT wrote:The solictor we are using said she wanted to try another angle. Jamaica gained independence in 1962, my dad was born before that and his mom came to england about 1960, thus she was a british citizen when he was born and when she travelled.
I am not entirely sure that the solicitor is on the right path.GoonerT wrote:My dad came to England from Jamaica in April 2000.
So, if Jamaican law made him a Jamaican citizen, your father automatically lost his British citizenship.Subject to the following provisions of this section, any person who immediately before the appointed day is a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies shall on that day cease to be such a citizen if—
(a)under the law of Jamaica he becomes on that day a citizen of Jamaica, and
(b)he, his father or his father's father was born in Jamaica.
Registration?GoonerT wrote:The solictor we are using said she wanted to try another angle. Jamaica gained independence in 1962, my dad was born before that and his mom came to england about 1960, thus she was a british citizen when he was born and when she travelled. The Solicitor wants the British Jamaican passport she first travelled on to england but we are unable to locate it so far.
Common law marriage is a myth, it doesn't exist (in UK) and the parties to such a 'marriage' have no rights.GoonerT wrote:...
Also as common law partners, I thought they had the same right as married couples?
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