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I would think that the answer is yes.Sam26 wrote:Hi,
I am a British Citizen and my GF who is on a student Visa and is now preganant. Does she still get all the benefits/services from NHS or not?
See this page:If i want to marry her, can we apply here OR does she need to go back to India? i have read something like 'permission to marry'
Waiting in antcipation
Ricky
Sam26 wrote:Thanks for your help.
I also have another problem. A huge one infact!!
We are both married to other people and seperated - but NOT divorced
She wants a divorce from her husband(who is in India) but he is refusing to do so.
Can she apply for divorce from the UK or does she need to go to India to apply for a divorce.
It will save you the GBP200 you would otherwise have had to spend to register the child as a British citizen with the Home Office!Sam26 wrote:You mentioned that UNDER THE NEW RULES
My British Citizenship will be passed on to my child, even if im not married as long as my name is on the BC.
How can this actually help us?
It won't help you - unless your girlfriend succeeds in getting a divorce before the child is born.Sam26 wrote:You mentioned that UNDER THE NEW RULES
My British Citizenship will be passed on to my child, even if im not married as long as my name is on the BC.
How can this actually help us?
ppron747 wrote:It won't help you - unless your girlfriend succeeds in getting a divorce before the child is born.Sam26 wrote:You mentioned that UNDER THE NEW RULES
My British Citizenship will be passed on to my child, even if im not married as long as my name is on the BC.
How can this actually help us?
The new rules - explained here - provide that, for the purposes of the British Nationality Act 1981, where the child's mother isn't married, the father is the man named on the child's birth certificate. This, I think, is generally good news. However, there's a flip side; where the mother is married, the father of a child is the husband of the child's mother - even if, as in this case, the husband and wife are separated by several thousand miles. There is no provision for this to be overridden by (eg) DNA testing - or even commonsense.
Frankly, I think the rules were botched, because it means that someone in your future child's situation could be effectively stuck with the "wrong" father for British Nationality purposes, and would need to be registered as a British citizen, rather than getting British citizenship automatically.
I think it would be in your girlfriend's interests to consult a lawyer on the question divorce, as soon as possible. There's no need for you to be married before the baby arrives, but it could be important that she at least is no longer married to her husband by the time the big day comes...
But wouldn't the birth cert name the real father? Isn't the problem that the father on the birth cert would not be considered the "father" for the purpose of the British Nationality Act 1981?ppron747 wrote:Yes, they would, JAJ - I'm certain of it. But it wouldn't prevent young Master or Miss Sam26's being saddled for life with an inaccurate birth certificate - someting best avoided, IMO...
Yes - you're probably right there, although the "default" would be to name a married woman's husband on the B/C, so it would certainly take an argument to get the true facts reflected in the entry. I wonder if the Home Office even thought of talking to the General Register Office (or anyone else) before bringing in the regulations?JAJ wrote:But wouldn't the birth cert name the real father? Isn't the problem that the father on the birth cert would not be considered the "father" for the purpose of the British Nationality Act 1981?