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ppron747 wrote:I think I may have it....
The father was a BC by descent, so "Stephen" had no automatic claim to BC.
The reporter says that the fees required by HO are about £600 - a lot more than the fee for naturalisation alone.
I suspect they're suggesting that he apply for ILR and naturalisation simultaneously (£335+£268=£603), and they're proposing to excuse him from having had ILR for the 12 months leading up to the date of application
Howzat?
If anyone applied for him to have it, yes... Otherwise, no.JAJ wrote:If he came to the United Kingdom aged 1 (as ther article suggests) then surely he must have been granted ILR long ago.
If I'm correct in guessing that his father was a CUKC by descent, it is quite likely that he was also a citizen of somewhere else by birth, and that "Stephen" had a claim to that citizenship by descent, and travelled on a passport issued by that country. Alternatively, he would almost certainly have been included in the British passport of one or both of his parents, had they applied - with or without an endorsement to effect that "The included child is not a citizen of the UK & Colonies". This was not at all uncommon in the 1960s.JAJ wrote:One also has to ask what passport he travelled on to the UK,
If he travelled at all during his childhood it could quite possibly have been on a British Visitors Passport - a one-year triptych-format excuse for a passport which, until things were tightened up, could be got at a Post Office on production of a public library card and a milk-bottle top. (Well, not quite, but the applicant could cherry-pick from a list of suggested supporting documents and produce two items, neither of which had anything to do with proving citizenship).JAJ wrote:and for any journeys since.
I was wondering whether his parents had done anything to regularise his status in the UK as a child.ppron747 wrote:I'm no expert, but I think one has to apply for ILR in order for it to be granted.
And the media leave us guessing as to what this country might be.One also has to ask what passport he travelled on to the UK, If I'm correct in guessing that his father was a CUKC by descent, it is quite likely that he was also a citizen of somewhere else by birth, and that "Stephen" had a claim to that citizenship by descent, and travelled on a passport issued by that country.
The wording from this part of the Nationality Instructions seems more cryptic than it needs to be:Alternatively, he would almost certainly have been included in the British passport of one or both of his parents, had they applied - with or without an endorsement to effect that "The included child is not a citizen of the UK & Colonies". This was not at all uncommon in the 1960s.
It seems that the BVP lasted right up to 1995:JAJ wrote: Even after things were "tightened up" the new rules only applied to people getting a BVP for the the first time - anyone who'd previously had one could get a replacement without further evidence, right up to when the thing was discontinued in (I think) the early 1980s.
Almost certainly not - non-Brit children were almost routinely included in the passport of a British parent until the '70s, simply to facilitate travel. The passport would only show the parent's nationality, and it was generally explained to the parent that the child wasn't British, and that they needed to do something about it when they got to UK.JAJ wrote: The wording from this part of the Nationality Instructions seems more cryptic than it needs to be:
http://www.ind.homeoffice.gov.uk/docume ... iew=Binary
Could it help in a case like this? (if indeed he was included on parent's British passport).
Good point.JAJ wrote: Of course if mother became British otherwise than by descent, there might now be a possibility to register as a British citizen on that basis. It would at least avoid the ILR fee.
I wouldn't stake my life on it, but I think that may be a misprint, and that BVPs died a bit earlier than that...JAJ wrote: It seems that the BVP lasted right up to 1995:
http://www.passport.gov.uk/general_history_visitors.asp
It seems the BVP did last until around 1995. From Hansard, 10 Feb 2005:ppron747 wrote:I wouldn't stake my life on it, but I think that may be a misprint, and that BVPs died a bit earlier than that...