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The condition is that you intend to make the UK your home. There is absolutely nothing stopping you from permanently leaving the UK the day after you obtain your British passport. People's intentionschange all the time.Xzibit1 wrote:I note that one of the conditions is that the applicant should make the UK their permanent home, or continue to work overseas with a British Company or Work Overseas with an International Organisation of which the UK is a member.
There are very clear residency rules indicating exactly how many days out of each year in the preceding 5 years before you apply for naturalisation you are allowed to spend outside of the UK without prejudicing your naturalisation application. This includes concessions for work-related absences. There is absolutely no reason to not accept an assignment outside the UK in the last 6 months before your application as long as you can produce evidence that the absence was indeed work-related.SYH wrote:I think the preceding year, particularly the last 6 months you should stay put in the UK, I am a contractor and I have lots of friends who want to be naturalised. However the area of work we are in, requires a bit of travel and sometimes we are heavily sought after for work abroad. We have all agreed we can work around the issue of temp assignments abroad where we commute, meaning fly in monday leave Friday and some even have rented flats because its cheaper than being in a hotel for 4 nights but no one will accept an assignement outside the uk in the last 6 months before applying for naturalisation.
Everytime you apply? You seem to be implying that you regularly apply for naturalisation? What exactly are applying for?SYH wrote:I dont know how the home office checks on your prior residences, if they go to the address, ask questions of people living in the area and your work employment but everytime I apply I make sure I am in the country at the time of the application and I have been there for a couple of months in a specific location and I STAY there until I get the approval. My application usually comes back in one month which always makes me wonder if they check at all but I dont leave it chance and neither should you.
No, as noted above, that is not so. It is true that when a person naturalises, he or she states that the intention is to continue to reside in the UK (unless married to a British citizen, in which case that provision doesn't apply). However, this does not mean that naturalised citizens have to stay residing the UK for ever: plans and circumstances change and such a declaration can be made quite legitimately even if, in the future, it happens that the person moves. But that has to be the intention at the time.sunnyday wrote:One question though,
say if he does leave the UK after naturalisation and he has dual nationality, will the UK authority 'take away' his UK citizenship?
There are some rules imposed by the scandinavian countries saying that if one has lost ties with the country, eg, has not lived in the country for certain time, then he may lose right to have the nationality.
I see. That's why I made an assumption on a dual national. but it's all very clear now. Thanks folks.Christophe wrote:No, as noted above, that is not so. It is true that when a person naturalises, he or she states that the intention is to continue to reside in the UK (unless married to a British citizen, in which case that provision doesn't apply). However, this does not mean that naturalised citizens have to stay residing the UK for ever: plans and circumstances change and such a declaration can be made quite legitimately even if, in the future, it happens that the person moves. But that has to be the intention at the time.sunnyday wrote:One question though,
say if he does leave the UK after naturalisation and he has dual nationality, will the UK authority 'take away' his UK citizenship?
There are some rules imposed by the scandinavian countries saying that if one has lost ties with the country, eg, has not lived in the country for certain time, then he may lose right to have the nationality.
That caveat aside, there are no ordinary circumstances in which British citizenship can be removed from someone against his or her will - there are certain recent anti-terrorism provisions, but they are not important to most people (and incidentally, these provisions apply equally to naturalised and natural-born British citizens), and there are also provisions to remove citizenship if it was obtained fraudulently. Beyond that, not. It is possible to renounce British citizenship voluntarily, should you so wish; this must be done using the forms prescribed by law and regulation.
Also, as noted above, British citizenship cannot be removed or renounced if that would render the person stateless.
Britain used to have a law like this - repealed in 1964.sunnyday wrote:One question though,
say if he does leave the UK after naturalisation and he has dual nationality, will the UK authority 'take away' his UK citizenship?
As I understand it, these Scandinavian laws affect children born overseas to parents from that country, rather than those who have become naturalised citizens.There are some rules imposed by the scandinavian countries saying that if one has lost ties with the country, eg, has not lived in the country for certain time, then he may lose right to have the nationality.
Hi there I think this question has gotten lostSYH wrote:Can you cite where this guidance is?Dawie wrote: If you can prove that your excess absences are due to work obligations there won't be any problem, simple as that.
These laws apply to children born to at least one Scandinavian parent where the child has never lived in the respective Scandinavian country- the child loses the Scandinavian citizenship at the age of 22 automatically unless s/he lodges an application to retain the citizenship. The application to retain citizenship has to be made between the ages of 21 and 22. AFAIK, this is the case for Norway, Sweden and Denmark at least.JAJ wrote: As I understand it, these Scandinavian laws affect children born overseas to parents from that country, rather than those who have become naturalised citizens.
Does it? I suppose id does in the case of Nordic countries. Not all countries have any requirement that you cannot lose your citizenship if you don't have (or won't attain) another. For example, a US citizen can reounce US citizenship even if that will render the person stateless. Most people would say that this would be an extraordinarily foolish thing to do, but that's a separate matter.Dawie wrote:This of course assumes that the person holds an additional citizenship.