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In terms of registering child, a PR card (for parent) could help but doesn't appear to be mandatory.luccass wrote:Morning,
I'm planning to register my son, who was born in the UK, as a British citizen under section 1(3) of MN1.
I'm a citizen of a EEU country and since my son's arrival I've be become settled (have been exercising EEA free movement rights for a continuous period of five years).
Do I need to get hold of the PR card before I can send the application, or sending WRS registration card, P60s, etc.. is sufficient to prove my settlement?
I know that since Nov 15 the PR is required for naturalisation, but struggle to find firm info regarding MN1.
Any help greatly appreciated.
luccass
Be aware other members have experienced slight complications in persuading HMPO of their settled status.luccass wrote:Thanks for the confirmation and the linked document - wasn't aware such checklist existed.
I'm not surprised. EU law is complicated at the best of time. This is the reasoning that I think the Home Office used to make holding a PR card compulsory; that people who are knowledgeable in EU law gauge the PR application separately from the citizenship application, which is gauged by people knowledgable in UK nationality law.noajthan wrote:It seems some HMPO caseworkers are not over-familiar with this route &/or applications from EEA national parents.
+1secret.simon wrote:To the OP,
The document linked to by noajthan proceeds on the premise that the child was born after you acquired PR.
Use the document as a guide to apply for MN1, but not directly for a passport. Once you got MN1 for the child, that document is redundant as the passport would be issued on the basis of the registration certificate, not your PR.
I'm not surprised. EU law is complicated at the best of time. This is the reasoning that I think the Home Office used to make holding a PR card compulsory; that people who are knowledgeable in EU law gauge the PR application separately from the citizenship application, which is gauged by people knowledgable in UK nationality law.noajthan wrote:It seems some HMPO caseworkers are not over-familiar with this route &/or applications from EEA national parents.
To the OP, I would suggest applying for a PR certificate before the MN1. The MN1 application may take as long as a separate PR application and an MN1 application anyway as you will be relying on EU law.