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Shandard wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 2:36 pmDear All,
Kindly request any guidance on filing a MN1 application under 3.2 from Pakistan for my daughter.
1) Can I file an online application? Yes, apply here
2) How can I pay for it without a credit card? Is there a local payment option within Islamabad. You need to pay by card.
3) What about the original documents? Do the local script ones need to be translated? If so, are there recognised/approved translators. Is scanning acceptable? Will there be a local appointment for me to present them for scrutiny or verification? You need to find a translator yourself. I think you wll need to attend biometrics appointment but no one will check your original documents for accuracy when you submit. You will upload copies, and keep all originals.
4) My father was a citizen otherwise than by descent. I was born outside of the UK so a citizen by descent. My daughter was also born outside the UK so effectively she is applying under 3.2 on the basis that I resided in the UK for three years. How exhaustive do the proofs of the three years residence have to be. I have old passports and grandparents' nationality certificates.old passport should do. The documents you will need depend on how your father became a British citizen: did he naturalise or did grandparents naturalise? if the latter, I think you will need full birth certificates for father and marriage cert for grandparents and naturalisation certificate for British grandparent, marriage certificate for your parents, full birth certificate for you, marriage cert for you and wife, and full birth certificate for child. You need to track all generations.
I would be grateful for any help, especially from someone who has made a similar application from outside of the UK in similar circumstances. My apologies if the info has already been posted somewhere but after considerable time searching I've not been able to locate it.
Grandparents nationality certificates is fine. As for old passports, if the person is both a dual British and Pakistani citizen, it is possible (I don't know Pakistani rules on this) that neither passport may have been stamped if the person was traveling between the two countries. So they may not suffice as proof of residence in the UK.
Thank you for the compliment. You flatter me. Most of it comes from being a first generation migrant, which involves reading the rules, guidances, etc, in detail, to make sure that one doesn't get tripped over by a minute detail, and having every bit of paperwork/documentation to hand at the right time.
That is of course your choice and indeed your daughter is entitled to register as a British citizen before her 18th birthday, if your parents and you have met the conditions of Section 3(2).