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See also Irish nationality laws and Northern ireland.21 wrote:Passports are issued under the Royal Prerogative in the discretion of the Secretary of State. They are the property of the Crown, not of the passport holder and may be withdrawn by the Crown at any time. A British passport does not confer citizenship but is merely evidence of it. The Immigration Appeal Tribunal correctly held in Christodoulidou v. Secretary of State [1985] Immigration AR 179 that the conditions of entitlement to British citizenship are a matter of law...
Moreover, an Irish national is deemed as settled in the UK on arrival.50(1) wrote:“the United Kingdom” means Great Britain, Northern Ireland and the Islands, taken together;
From reading this post, I suspect there may be some confusion.chaoclive wrote:Thanks for this (although there's nothing there I didn't know already).
I think the key is: "The CTA entitlement does not prevent reliance on EEA free movement rights where they are more favourable." The two countries are separate sovereign states with their own nationality laws and, being different member states (despite the CTA), being a citizen of one of these states enables the member to avail of EUTR in the other, e.g. Irish citizen bringing a non-EEA partner to the UK and vice versa.
It still seems that it's important to confirm with the Home Office before a request for an EEAFP for a non-EEA national is made on the basis that he/she is married to an Irish national.
I will put in a request under FOI to see how the Home Office deal with this in practice.
Best
C
I now understand your point. Generally, people who are born in Northern Ireland are British according to British nationality law. The regulations, as drafted, would appear to preclude such a person from benefiting from the immigration (EEA) regulations (except Singh).chaoclive wrote:What was questioned above is if a person born in Northern Ireland who identifies solely as Irish (and by virtue has no British passport) is looked upon as being a British citizen under UK nationality law (according to the links provided above). Let's suppose this person has never moved outside NI.
I am of the opinion that no-one in Northern Ireland can be forced to be British by virtue of being born in NI and, therefore, they should be treated as solely Irish for the purposes of EEAFP applications (even though they have technically not moved outside their country of residence, which is the UK). However, there seems to be some disagreement about this. Let's not complicate matters here about Irish passport holders who live in GB - they are often unrelated to NI and have moved outside their normal country of residence. Also, let's not involve the CTA just now.
I have already submitted the FOI but please don't hold your breath for a response any time soon (even within the FOI deadline). Many people have outstanding requests in with the HO. Some of these have passed the FOI deadlines and are still awaiting internal review. I am going to compose a complaint to the ICO right this minute about a request that I lodged in mid-July.