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I have edited the list of conditions mentioned in Section 14 to list only that would apply to anybody who got British citizenship under Section 11(1), i.e. somebody who became a British citizen at the commencement of the BNA 1981, and which would be relevant to your wife.Section 14 of the British Nationality Act 1981, as enacted wrote:Meaning of British citizen (by descent).
(1)For the purposes of this Act a British citizen is a British citizen “by descent” if and only if—
...
(b)subject to subsection (2), he is a person born outside the United Kingdom before commencement who became a British citizen at commencement and immediately before commencement—
- (i)was a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies by virtue of section 5 of the 1948 Act (citizenship by descent); or
- (ii)was a person who, under any provision of the British Nationality Acts 1948 to 1965, was deemed for the purposes of the proviso to section 5(1) of the 1948 Act to be a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies by descent only, or would have been so deemed if male; or
- (iii)had the right of abode in the United Kingdom by virtue only of paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section 2 of the Immigration Act 1971 as then in force (connection with United Kingdom through parent or grandparent), or by virtue only of that paragraph and paragraph (c) of that subsection (settlement in United Kingdom with five years’ ordinary residence there), ...
This is incorrect. Section 14 of the BNA 1981 linked above lists many modes of registration, any of which would make such a registered person a British citizen by descent. Not all registered persons are "British citizens otherwise than by descent". All naturalised citizens, on the other hand, are.
The National Archives should be able to help with figuring out if her citizenship arises from her father's registration/naturalisation or her own. It is highly unlikely that she would have been naturalised as she would know it. Naturalisation is for adults only, whereas registration can be done for children and adults meeting various different requirements.dr_cox wrote: ↑Mon Jul 01, 2024 9:24 pm1) I was under the impression from the letter and from what her father had told her before his death when he handed her the document (difficult family dynamics) that she was naturalized. This seems somewhat inaccurate but from what I understand she came to the UK 1976 at 2 months of age and was subsequently registered / naturalized before 1983. This is what she has been told all her life. No additional documents apart from her pakistan issued birth certificate and the letter I quoted.
That is good. If she is a British citizen by descent AND her father was registered or naturalised in the UK (i.e. he was a British citizen otherwise than by descent), then the children are entitled (i.e. can't be refused if the conditions are met) to register as British citizens under Section 3(2), because their mother had lived in the UK for at least three continuous years before they were born. You will need their grandfather's (your wife's father's) registration/naturalisation certificate from the National Archives to go down this route.
secret.simon wrote: ↑Mon Jul 01, 2024 11:53 pmYou should be able to purchase a copy of the registration or naturalisation certificate from the National Archives for a fee.
If registering on Form MN1 under Section 3(2), there will need to be proof that the parent of the British citizen by descent parent was a British citizen otherwise than by descent. That requirement is irrespective of the length of time the parent has lived in UK.
Sponsored as dependants on a visa. Note that both parents need to live in the UK with the children. What is your (the other parent's) UK immigration status?
potentially, I found her father‘s certificate but not sure as his name matches but not the city in the UK referenced. but only one match to the name.secret.simon wrote: ↑Mon Jul 01, 2024 5:32 pm
Either her father (because at that time only the father could pass on CUKC status to children born outside the UK) was registered as a British citizen in the UK before her birth, OR,
she was registered or naturalised as a British citizen after moving to the UK.
I'd say that your first port of call would be for your wife to contact the National Archives and see if they have a registration or naturalisation certificate for either your wife herself or her father.
Submit it as proof to the UKVI when applying for the children to register as British citizens under Section 3(2).
Call the National Archives. Hopefully their helpline has not been outsourced.
In that case, the only way to get your children British citizenship is to move to the UK en famille and apply for registration under Section 3(5) after three years, before their 18th birthday.
Is there another possibility, if both father and daughter had not naturalise nor register?secret.simon wrote: ↑Mon Jul 01, 2024 5:32 pmAs she was born outside the UK, there are two possible ways that your wife would have acquired CUKC status and RoA status.
Either her father (because at that time only the father could pass on CUKC status to children born outside the UK) was registered as a British citizen in the UK before her birth, OR,
she was registered or naturalised as a British citizen after moving to the UK.
They were both citizens of the United Kingdom and Colonies; and in 1983, perhaps both had the Right of abode under Section 2(1)(c)?dr_cox wrote: ↑Mon Jul 01, 2024 1:52 amMy wife was born in Pakistan before 1981 to two pakistani nationals (father however lived and worked in the UK at that time and some time before), moved to the UK at 2 months of age, and has in her possession a letter from the home office that given the evidence her father provided she became a british national under section 11(1) under the british nationality act of 1981. She was 5 years of age in 1981.
Then is Section 11(1) satisfied?(1) A person is under this Act to have the right of abode in the United Kingdom if—
- (c) he is a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies who has at any time been settled in the United Kingdom and Islands and had at that time (and while such a citizen) been ordinarily resident there for the last five years or more ; or
surprisingly make both father and daughter British citizens by descent, unless Section 14(2) applies?
- (1) For the purposes of this Act a British citizen is a British citizen “by descent” if and only if—
- (b) subject to subsection (2), he is a person born outside the United Kingdom before commencement who became a British citizen at commencement and immediately before commencement—
- (iii) had the right of abode in the United Kingdom by virtue only of paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section 2 of the M1Immigration Act 1971 as then in force (connection with United Kingdom through parent or grandparent), or by virtue only of that paragraph and paragraph (c) of that subsection (settlement in United Kingdom with five years’ ordinary residence there), or by virtue only of being or having been the wife of a person who immediately before commencement had that right by virtue only of the said paragraph (b) or the said paragraphs (b) and (c); or
- (2) A person born outside the United Kingdom before commencement is not a British citizen “by descent” by virtue of subsection (1)(b) or (e) if his father was at the time of his birth serving outside the United Kingdom—
- (a) in service of a description mentioned in subsection (3), his recruitment for the service in question having taken place in the United Kingdom; or
- (b) in service under a [F6EU] institution, his recruitment for that service having taken place in a country which at the time of the recruitment was a member of the Communities.
- (3)The descriptions of service referred to in subsection (2) are—
- (a)Crown service under the government of the United Kingdom; and
- (b)service of any description at any time designated under section 2(3).
The question then becomes, how did either father or daughter or both acquire CUKC status in the first place? That would have had to be by registration or naturalisation.
You mean that the father is almost certainly naturalised or registered as a British citizen.
If your wife has a registration certificate, she's almost certainly a British citizen otherwise than by descent (though we'd have to check which Section she was registered under).
It is the responsibility of the applicant to maintain the requisite documentation, if necessary, over decades. And almost every family has drama. Watch almost any soap opera across any culture and family dramas are often at the root of them all.
Non-British citizen children born outside the UK follow the same immigration pathway as the less-privileged parent. If you are on a limited visa and your wife is a British citizen, that means that they are dependent on you for the duration of their and your visa, until all three of you complete three continuous years of residence in the UK, when they become eligible to register as British citizens under Section 3(5).
Good question.secret.simon wrote: ↑Tue Jul 02, 2024 8:59 amThe question then becomes, how did either father or daughter or both acquire CUKC status in the first place? That would have had to be by registration or naturalisation.
Yes, that means that her father was a CUKC at the time of her birth.