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if this is the case then actually it will not make much difference even if you apply for child on the same day you received ILR.plabo wrote:
My question again is, where EXACTLY is it mentioned that the PARENT has to submit his BRP as well? Let me clear the case again. I am applying for ILR on the basis of 5 years Tier 2 Work Permit Set O form and my child has been born during our stay in the UK and is a Tier 2 dependant (BRP holder). We will be applying through Premium ILR and as soon as we get our approval/BRP, we intend to get the child registered as a British Citizen Section 1 (3)
As far as I have understood from the MN1 guide, the PARENT DOES NOT need to send his BRP along. Can someone clarify this again please as it seems very obvious and the replies given above are not in line with the Home office requirements.
The guidance is not the law. It is just guidance.plabo wrote:Dear all
Please read the following MN1 guide at this link page 28/29:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... r_2015.pdf
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My question again is, where EXACTLY is it mentioned that the PARENT has to submit his BRP as well? Let me clear the case again. I am applying for ILR on the basis of 5 years Tier 2 Work Permit Set O form and my child has been born during our stay in the UK and is a Tier 2 dependant (BRP holder). We will be applying through Premium ILR and as soon as we get our approval/BRP, we intend to get the child registered as a British Citizen Section 1 (3)
As far as I have understood from the MN1 guide, the PARENT DOES NOT need to send his BRP along. Can someone clarify this again please as it seems very obvious and the replies given above are not in line with the Home office requirements.
noajthan wrote:The guidance is not the law. It is just guidance.plabo wrote:Dear all
Please read the following MN1 guide at this link page 28/29:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... r_2015.pdf
...
My question again is, where EXACTLY is it mentioned that the PARENT has to submit his BRP as well? Let me clear the case again. I am applying for ILR on the basis of 5 years Tier 2 Work Permit Set O form and my child has been born during our stay in the UK and is a Tier 2 dependant (BRP holder). We will be applying through Premium ILR and as soon as we get our approval/BRP, we intend to get the child registered as a British Citizen Section 1 (3)
As far as I have understood from the MN1 guide, the PARENT DOES NOT need to send his BRP along. Can someone clarify this again please as it seems very obvious and the replies given above are not in line with the Home office requirements.
You need to prove you are settled to invoke the child's entitlement to citizenship.
To prove you are settled you need to send your BRP. Is that clear enough?
Interesting to note that some members who became settled and then became citizens and only sent their passport to support child's registration have, in some cases, been refused because they were not able to prove when they were settled (because they had returned their BRP to HO on naturalising).
Can you now see how critical BRP is?
I don't want to send my BRP as will be travelling immediately after getting ILR and my child will stay back in the UK with his mother until his registration is done. It is not about my child's visa expiring. Again, HOME OFFICE DOES NOT need the parents BRP. A copy even of the ILR approval letter or BRP will do. They need the child's original documents.Abc499 wrote:@ plabo
It seems that you do not want to provide your BRP but want to provide the ILR approval letter. Is it because you want to apply for the child registration immediately after approval and do not want to wait for BRP as child current visa expiring (might expire if you wait for BRP) ??
Stop shouting, I'm not deaf.plabo wrote:I don't want to send my BRP as will be travelling immediately after getting ILR and my child will stay back in the UK with his mother until his registration is done. It is not about my child's visa expiring. Again, HOME OFFICE DOES NOT need the parents BRP. A copy even of the ILR approval letter or BRP will do. They need the child's original documents.Abc499 wrote:@ plabo
It seems that you do not want to provide your BRP but want to provide the ILR approval letter. Is it because you want to apply for the child registration immediately after approval and do not want to wait for BRP as child current visa expiring (might expire if you wait for BRP) ??
Sometimes, things are not spelt out because they are blindlingly obvious.plabo wrote:My question again is, where EXACTLY is it mentioned that the PARENT has to submit his BRP as well?
+1secret.simon wrote:Sometimes, things are not spelt out because they are blindlingly obvious.plabo wrote:My question again is, where EXACTLY is it mentioned that the PARENT has to submit his BRP as well?
You will be registering your child under Section 1(3) of the BNA 1981, which gives a child born in the UK an entitlement to be registered when any one parent of that child gets settled status (ILR/PR).
...
You do not need a document list to figure out which documents are needed, just an understanding of the provisions of the law.
Remember that the immigration departments and naturalisation departments in the Home office are separate and may not even have access to the same information. So, do not assume that an ILR letter is sufficient proof of having ILR. Only the BRP is conclusive proof.
The irony is that by trying to short-circuit the process, you may actually end up lengthening the process because you will be submitting proof that the caseworker would not be expecting, leading to delays and requests for follow-on information.
Indeed; it would be inadvisable to rely on that generic and near anonymous letter.Obie wrote:Even by post, a copy of passport and BRP will suffice.
I bow to your superior knowledge in aspects of the law, Obie, but I am not certain that the UKV&I deals with naturalisation/registration applications. Their website seems to relate solely to immigration.Obie wrote:UKVI is the department of the Home Office that deals with both immigration and nationality.
Just to clarify, the OP does not wish to wait to receive the BRP. He wants to apply for the child's registration straightaway after the same-day premium service with the ILR approval letter, without even a copy of the BRP. Is that possible, Obie?Obie wrote:It is not necessary to send an original BRP for Registration. A copy is fine. I have never sent an original for reigstration purpose.
It may well be possible, as the effect date of approval of settlement application is not when the BrP is received , but when the person was approved at the PEO.secret.simon wrote:Just to clarify, the OP does not wish to wait to receive the BRP. He wants to apply for the child's registration straightaway after the same-day premium service with the ILR approval letter, without even a copy of the BRP. Is that possible, Obie?Obie wrote:It is not necessary to send an original BRP for Registration. A copy is fine. I have never sent an original for reigstration purpose.
The Department of State that deals with both immigration and naturalisation applications is the Home Office.Obie wrote:Ok, so just out of curiosity, which department deal with nationality and immigration?
I have always thought it was dealt with by the Home office.
Will if i understood that to be your views, it would have been perfectly accepted, and i will not have questioned it, Department 1 is where Naturalisation and Registration are dealt with.secret.simon wrote:
I was however under the impression that different teams/departments/directorates within the Home Office deal with immigration and naturalisation applications. And I was wrong. UKV&I looks after both those aspects of Home Office work.
brilliant solutionplabo wrote:
I think the most reliable way out would be go through NCS for MN1 and submit an attested copy of my BRP and keep the BRP with myself as need to travel.
This is normal practice.Abc499 wrote:brilliant solutionplabo wrote:
I think the most reliable way out would be go through NCS for MN1 and submit an attested copy of my BRP and keep the BRP with myself as need to travel.