Vilayat1 wrote: ↑Sun Aug 21, 2022 7:52 pm
No Section mentioned
Even No word Section in whole letter.
I'll advise below based on the assumption that the British citizenship
of your father is inheritable. That assumption could be wrong (depending on the Section
of the BNA 1948 that he was registered under) and therefore the rest
of the advice could be redundant.
You can only have automatically inherited your British citizenship from your father (before 2007) if your father was married to your mother. You will
of course need documentary proof
of that.
If you do not have documentary proof
of that, you may need to register as a British citizen on
Form UKF, as the child
of an unmarried British father. Hopefully he is named on your birth certificate and the birth certificate is issued within 12 months
of your birth.
So, to summarise at this point, to prove British citizenship, you will need your father's registration certificate, your own birth certificate and your parents' marriage certificate. If you do not have the last document, you are not a British citizen, but can apply to become one with the first two (and also read the guidance linked to above).
Note that once you get your British passport, your challenges will only have just started. British citizenship gives only you the
right to move to the UK, not the rest
of your family.
To bring your spouse and your younger child to the UK, you will need to show
(a) an income
of at least £22,400 per annum in the country you are resident in now AND a confirmed job offer in the UK paying at least as much, or,
(b) an income
of at least £22,400 in the UK (for six months if you are salaried and 12 months if variable income)-this option will require you to move to the UK on your own without your family for those six or 12 months, or,
(c) savings
of at least £72,000 held in an accessible ban account for at least six months.
The fees for their applications will be ~£1,500 each + £1,800 each for their Immigration Health Surcharge. This visa would be valid for 2.5 years after which they need to reapply for another visa
of the same nature, with concomitant fees.
So, to summarise, it is going to be a long, difficult journey ahead for your family and you.
I am not a lawyer or immigration advisor. My statements/comments do not constitute legal advice. E&OE. Please do not PM me for advice.