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The right of abode is the status held by all British citizens, but there are also some residual groups of non-British-citizen British nationals and Commonwealth citizens who have the right of abode under the 1981 Act and who, barring a change in the law or loss of their Commonwealth citizenship, will hold this right for the rest of their life. (Main groups are Commonwealth citizens born to a UK-born mother before 1983, female Commonwealth citizens married at some time before 1983 to a man with the right of abode, and British subjects with a connection to the Republic of Ireland.) Since 1983, the only way to gain the right of abode has been to become a British citizen, so these are residual groups, as I say.HSMPnUK wrote:Changes proposed in visitor visa category includes that a family member should be sponsered by a person 'holding British citizenship, EEA nationality, the right of abode in the UK or Indefinite Leave to Remain'.
I am not sure what this right of abode means.
Well, leaving all that daily mail thing aside, defenitely it is news to us all that one can sponsor their family (parents etc.) to visit UK only if the sponsor himself is a UK settled person (Citizen, ILR etc.). That is aobsolutely a news that we have not heard here in this forum so far:-)As regards what you have posted, what are you trying to prove? That the Daily Mail has an anti-immigration stance? If that is the case, well it is hardly big news, is it!