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arabindianbritish wrote:My daughter was born in India. She has settlement dependent visa now same for my wife. I wanted to know if once I acquire BC which I will apply shortly. I am on ILR for past 3 years. Instead to getting BC for my child can I get COE on her Indian passport. No, she cannot. This would ONLY be applicable if she was born abroad AFTER you got BC.
I cannot find any details on this. I can only see my daughter will be eligible for BC registeration after she gets ILR. But really I dont want her to be BC until she is 18 years of age. We are planning to R2I in couple of years. Have no idea what 'R2I' is. If she holds ILR, she can apply for BC at any point, even as an adult (which is more expensive and has more requirements). Remember that ILR is lost with absence of more than 2 years from the UK.
Also my future kids can do the same? Any children born abroad AFTER you are BC, will be automatically BC.
I would appreciate if anyone can share your expertise.
Thank you
arabindianbritish wrote:Thanks for your info. So my daughter cannot acquire COE. She needs to be either on ILR or BC. Only a BC can get CoE or RoA
R2I is returning to India for good. Please type normally rather than 'text speak'.
I am planning to move to India. So what really is that my future kids who are born here or in India after I get BC can acquire COE but not my daughter. Correct. And if she is away from the UK 'for good', she loses her ILR status too and any route to BC is then closed to her unless she starts again from scratch if you move back before she is 18. Once she is 18, she will have to qualify for a visa in her own right.
Please correct me if I am wrong somewhere.
Thanks for clarifying.
You'll just knowingly lie on your application instead?.arabindianbritish wrote:Ofcourse I wont say on my application.
So you're going to lie then? Because there is a question asking where you intend to make your home, and at the end of the application you have to sign a declaration stating that you have been truthful.arabindianbritish wrote:Ofcourse I wont say on my application.
Particularly since India doesn't allow dual nationality. Makes no sense at allohara wrote: Just out of curiosity, why are you so desperate to obtain British citizenship for your whole family if you intend to return to India for good? Surely it's better to be a citizen of your own country.
Not advisable to play fast and loose with such applications.arabindianbritish wrote:Ofcourse I wont say on my application.
If your daughter was born in the UK AND you or your wife had ILR/PR on the date of her birth, then the Indian passport+CoE-RoA option was possible.arabindianbritish wrote: if my daughter was born in Uk I could have taken her Indian passport and applied for COE. But since she is born in India whilst I was holding ILR she cannot have COE. She can only hold BC and passport.
If they are born after you naturalise (after the date of your citizenship ceremony), they will be British by descent if they are born outside the UK.arabindianbritish wrote:I presume my future kids will have options to either have British passport or Indian passport?
That is, for free. 3 years consecutive residence in the UK will make such British children sufficiently British to be able to buy British citizenship for their minor children subsequently born outside the UK (BNA 1981 Section 3(2)).secret.simon wrote:Remember that any children born to you outside the UK (after you become a British citizen) will be British by descent and hence they can not pass on their British citizenship to their children (your grand children), unless the grand children are born in the UK.
Easy tiger.Richard W wrote:That is, for free. 3 years consecutive residence in the UK will make such British children sufficiently British to be able to buy British citizenship for their minor children subsequently born outside the UK (BNA 1981 Section 3(2)).secret.simon wrote:Remember that any children born to you outside the UK (after you become a British citizen) will be British by descent and hence they can not pass on their British citizenship to their children (your grand children), unless the grand children are born in the UK.
It is a misconception to think in terms of 'buying' of citizenship; it is not guaranteed.It is important to note that a child registered under this section will be a British citizen by descent and unable to pass British citizenship automatically by descent to any of their children born abroad.
Purchase under Section 3(2) is an entitlement unless the child has reached the age of 10; the child's lack of good character may remove the right thereafter (Section 41A); and at 18 the right evaporates. Do you have some other restriction in mind, such as the definitions of 'father' and 'mother'?noajthan wrote:It is a misconception to think in terms of 'buying' of citizenship; it is not guaranteed.
Registration under Section 3(5), while better, requires a greater commitment to the UK and usually costs more - at least two losts of fees. The child usually first needs a visa, and the mother will often (usually?) need one as well.noajthan wrote:However a sojourn of 3 years in UK with parent/s may earn such an offspring the privilege of citizenship other than by descent; s.3(5).
Why should 3(1) be confusing; it is what it is, based on settlement in UK and future clearly in UK.The British citizen by descent parent must have lived in the UK (...) for a continuous period of 3 years at any time before the child’s birth