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Hi Jeff,Jeff Albright wrote: My case was found to be truly exceptional so BA were forced to issue the status to me but not to my wife and my daughter.
Well, you can expect them to know nationality law of every country in the world. It would have probably helped if the lady could show some proofs that children do not have her nationality (e.g. letter from her embassy). Perhaps she could apply for her children passports through the embassy and then show the BIA the refusal letter stating the reasons.bahwe wrote: the thing is no one had a clue about the nationality issue not even the lady's lawyers.
Well, I am sorry to hear about this but the case should have been correctly prepared and all the relevant information given to the parties. Naturally if you do not put forward your submissions, neither the BA nor the judges will know anything about it. It is for the applicant to prepare the case correctly and submit all the relevant information.bahwe wrote: the problem is that this nationality issue has never been raised before, the lawyers, the H.O, the judge all considered that the kids had their mum's nationality
Yes, that is right and I do not know why. I contacted one of the Grade 7 caseworkers in a few sections in the Home Office, cannot even remember now where exactly. But I did speak on the phone with them and also wrote letters but to no avail. They just kept promising that they would look into that and get back to me but never did. Perhaps if I followed this up vigorously through the complaints, they would have had the status but there was no time and we already had had enough with the Home Office. Soon after my daughter was given my nationality and the passport, I was offered a job in Australia and visas so we left very soon thereafter. We had up to here with the UK system and we just did not want to be in that country any longer. But I still do not know why my family were not issued with the same status as me. My wife was still on a student visa then, perhaps this was the reason. I do not honestly know.tasha75 wrote: That's strange, I understand about the wife, but why they did not issue any status to your child?
If your child had a dependent of a student status, then that I assume was the reason for not issuing her with the same status as you. I don;t think they can issue DL to someone who has a valid visa in another category. When I got refused, my children were also served with IS151, and as a a result were included in my appeal.Jeff Albright wrote: My wife was still on a student visa then, perhaps this was the reason. I do not honestly know.
Some nationalities are not passed from a parent to a child automatically, you have to apply for it, and it may be difficult if not impossible if you don't have your own passport. And sometimes you even need your foreign spouse permission for that.bahwe wrote:Hi Jeff
You said that your daughter was considered stateless, but didn't she get your nationality by birth?
If the father cannot or will not sign for his children's passport applications, would that not be taken as a refusal of paternity? Does this woman have birth certificates for the children with the father named on them? If so, the court can be petitioned to force him to sign the documents required for their passports to be issued, especially where he is named on the birth certificates. I think the order costs £90. Is there a residency order in effect? Does he have PR? Does he take an active role in the kids upbringing? If he is denying paternity, then wouldn't this statement apply:bahwe wrote:Hi Tasha
There is a difference between transmitting citizenship primarily by "law of blood" (jus sanguinis) through patrilinial descent, and between administrative procedures, even if the child has his father's nationality by birth he still have to apply for an ID, passport, nationality certificate, if abroad go to the embassy.......
The mother is from Syria and her ex is north African, the mother applied for asylum with her kids as dependents, Her ex got married to an European lady and has 5 years residency. The kids by birth have their father's nationality but they don't have passports because they need their father signature, so if deported should they go to their father's country, how could they follow their mother ( they must have passports in order to get a Syrian residency stamped on it), is it possible to separate them from their mum and send them to a country they don't speak the language, or is it possible to deport them to Syria with no documents, as stateless with no rights?
Thandia, I don't think having north african passports for children will make a big difference in lady's case. Even if they have passports, how can North African citizen be removed to Syria?Thandia wrote: In a ntshell, what I think is, if father is named on birth certificates & mother has residency orders for kids, court can be petitioned for father to sign passport application forms for his children resulting in issuance of passports.
tasha75 wrote:Thandia, I don't think having north african passports for children will make a big difference in lady's case. Even if they have passports, how can North African citizen be removed to Syria?Thandia wrote: In a ntshell, what I think is, if father is named on birth certificates & mother has residency orders for kids, court can be petitioned for father to sign passport application forms for his children resulting in issuance of passports.
bahwe, does the father take any role in upbringing the children? Is he willing to help his ex (the lady in question)?
I think that is the main issue in this case, deporting north African kids to Syria, also if Thandia point of view is right this still lead to the same thing.tasha75 wrote:Thandia, I don't think having north african passports for children will make a big difference in lady's case. Even if they have passports, how can North African citizen be removed to Syria?Thandia wrote: In a ntshell, what I think is, if father is named on birth certificates & mother has residency orders for kids, court can be petitioned for father to sign passport application forms for his children resulting in issuance of passports.
bahwe, does the father take any role in upbringing the children? Is he willing to help his ex (the lady in question)?
yes I did. The IND lost my passport and I could not prove my nationality to my embassy due to a long time passed since my passport was misplaced. The embassy could only issue me with a one-way travel document to my original country (the embassy rules and the law), where I could apply for a new passport at the local passport office. Since I did not have the status in the UK, my return would not be guaranteed. My daughter would not have been admitted into my original country without a passport. Therefore she could not travel with me and my return to the UK to her could not be guaranteed by the Immigration Rules. This constituted an insurmountable obstable for me departing from the UK and was sufficiently valid and accetable within the interpretation of the Human Rights claim. It was accepted by the Judge.bahwe wrote: Did any concrete obstacle prevent you from passing your nationality to your daughter?
Hi JeffJeff Albright wrote:yes I did. The IND lost my passport and I could not prove my nationality to my embassy due to a long time passed since my passport was misplaced. The embassy could only issue me with a one-way travel document to my original country (the embassy rules and the law), where I could apply for a new passport at the local passport office. Since I did not have the status in the UK, my return would not be guaranteed. My daughter would not have been admitted into my original country without a passport. Therefore she could not travel with me and my return to the UK to her could not be guaranteed by the Immigration Rules. This constituted an insurmountable obstable for me departing from the UK and was sufficiently valid and accetable within the interpretation of the Human Rights claim. It was accepted by the Judge.bahwe wrote: Did any concrete obstacle prevent you from passing your nationality to your daughter?