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Country of birth - potential refusal?

A section for posts relating to applications for Naturalisation or Registration as a British Citizen. Naturalisation

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uli-pinky
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Country of birth - potential refusal?

Post by uli-pinky » Mon Dec 19, 2016 3:07 pm

Hi all
i recently completed my LIUK test - on the certificate it states country of birth, German Democratic Republic.
This is literally correct as it was still East Germany at the time but in my passport etc. my country of birth states Germany.

Will this mismatch on the documents cause any issues? Do i need to re-do my LIUK test and state Germany?

Any past experiences or feedback would be appreciated :-)

Many thanks

MrsGreenside
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Re: Country of birth - potential refusal?

Post by MrsGreenside » Mon Dec 19, 2016 3:35 pm

Why have you used your birth certificate as source for the birth location at the LiUK test? Or was this done by the centre? If so I would hand in my birth certificate with a note that the GDR became BRD on 3rd Oct 1990. I cannot see this being an issue. After all it's still the same country.

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Casa
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Re: Country of birth - potential refusal?

Post by Casa » Mon Dec 19, 2016 7:38 pm

MrsGreenside wrote:Why have you used your birth certificate as source for the birth location at the LiUK test? Or was this done by the centre? If so I would hand in my birth certificate with a note that the GDR became BRD on 3rd Oct 1990. I cannot see this being an issue. After all it's still the same country.
My understanding is that the OP is referring to the LIUK certificate.

This won't be a problem.
(Casa, not CR001)
Please don't send me PMs asking for immigration advice on posts that are on the open forum. If I haven't responded there, it's because I don't have the answer. I'm a moderator, not a legal professional.

MrsGreenside
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Re: Country of birth - potential refusal?

Post by MrsGreenside » Tue Dec 20, 2016 7:50 am

That's what i said...?

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Casa
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Re: Country of birth - potential refusal?

Post by Casa » Tue Dec 20, 2016 8:29 am

MrsGreenside wrote:That's what i said...?
"Why have you used your birth certificate" The OP hasn't mentioned using a birth certificate.
(Casa, not CR001)
Please don't send me PMs asking for immigration advice on posts that are on the open forum. If I haven't responded there, it's because I don't have the answer. I'm a moderator, not a legal professional.

uli-pinky
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Re: Country of birth - potential refusal?

Post by uli-pinky » Tue Dec 20, 2016 8:34 am

Thanks for the replies.

I have not used my birth certificate, but when registering for LIUK you need to state country of birth - hence me being literal and stating GDR.
Therefore, the LIUK certificate stated GDR and not Germany as on my passport.

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Casa
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Re: Country of birth - potential refusal?

Post by Casa » Tue Dec 20, 2016 8:48 am

uli-pinky wrote:Thanks for the replies.

I have not used my birth certificate, but when registering for LIUK you need to state country of birth - hence me being literal and stating GDR.
Therefore, the LIUK certificate stated GDR and not Germany as on my passport.
As myself and MrsGreenside have said, this won't be a problem.
(Casa, not CR001)
Please don't send me PMs asking for immigration advice on posts that are on the open forum. If I haven't responded there, it's because I don't have the answer. I'm a moderator, not a legal professional.

MrsGreenside
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Posts: 58
Joined: Fri Oct 21, 2016 9:50 pm

Re: Country of birth - potential refusal?

Post by MrsGreenside » Tue Dec 20, 2016 9:10 am

Casa wrote:
MrsGreenside wrote:That's what i said...?
"Why have you used your birth certificate" The OP hasn't mentioned using a birth certificate.
Of course not :) but the only document that could still state GDR is their birth certificate. Had they used their passport upon registering for the LitUK test the problem would have not arisen in the first place. Hence my assumption that the birth certificate was used. See, where I am coming from?

@uli-pinky, so basically you took the whole country of birth quite literally. Do not worry about it, after all it's still the same country (technically it's always been but that's a different story altogether :) ). If you it makes you feel better, you can - as previously stated - add a note to your application to explain. However I really don't see this being an issue.

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