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Yes.Travelscout 2016 wrote:would that mean that my friend's Permanent resident status would cease to exist assuming that British citizenship was granted?
Your friend will likely have to give up his Malaysian passport.Travelscout 2016 wrote:If my friend was granted British citizenship, but is travelling on a Malaysian passport, then I assume Malaysian would be entered as nationality.
A British citizen cannot be refused entry into their own country. Separately, the moment he completes is naturalization ceremony for British citizenship, he loses his Malaysian citizenship. So technically he wouldn't be a 'dual' citizen anyway.Travelscout 2016 wrote:But in returning to the UK, if a British citizen who is also a Malaysian citizen, enters the UK on a Malaysian passport with British PR (which presumably is void as traveller has a British passport), wouldn't the UK immigration be suspicious and even refuse entry on that basis?
How does one who holds both Malaysian and British citizenships prove he is a British citizen at a London airport upon returning from Malaysia if he only has a Malaysian passport. This person wouldn't fmrisk bringing a British passport to Malaysia for fear of being found out and having to make a choice if renouncing one of his citizenships. By thruway this is all hypothetical and in no way would I want my friend to do anything illegal. I do want to dissuade my friend from applying for British citizenship for this very reason as my friend would ideally like to be able to have both Malaysian and British citizen ships.ouflak1 wrote:A British citizen cannot be refused entry into their own country. Separately, the moment he completes is naturalization ceremony for British citizenship, he loses his Malaysian citizenship. So technically he wouldn't be a 'dual' citizen anyway.Travelscout 2016 wrote:But in returning to the UK, if a British citizen who is also a Malaysian citizen, enters the UK on a Malaysian passport with British PR (which presumably is void as traveller has a British passport), wouldn't the UK immigration be suspicious and even refuse entry on that basis?
This all seems a bit far-fetched. Someone who is nominally a dual needs to acknowledge and abide by the rules of both regimes.Travelscout 2016 wrote:How does one who holds both Malaysian and British citizenships prove he is a British citizen at a London airport upon returning from Malaysia if he only has a Malaysian passport. This person wouldn't fmrisk bringing a British passport to Malaysia for fear of being found out and having to make a choice if renouncing one of his citizenships. By thruway this is all hypothetical and in no way would I want my friend to do anything illegal. I do want to dissuade my friend from applying for British citizenship for this very reason as my friend would ideally like to be able to have both Malaysian and British citizen ships.