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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
1. Three months sounds like an inordinate delay, even for an overseas application. Are you chasing HMPO regularly?krishnam wrote:Hi,
I got British Passport through naturalisation and my wife got ILR. My wife got pregnant in UK but we went to India for delivery of a baby. We applied for my kids British passport on 22nd Feb. Since 3 months my application got stuck with Overseas team for overseas checks. Not sure how long still will it take.
As I am missing my son and wife a lot - I am planning to apply for Right Of Abode (ROA) in the mean time so that I can get Indian passport for my kid and then apply for ROA and then go to UK as we are missing each other a lot.
Is that going to cause any problem if I apply for ROA while my kids British passport application is in progress?
Could you please suggest / share any experiences?
Many thanks
Krishna
1. The boy can't get an entry clearance - he's a British citizen.Obie wrote:The above is wrong.
Firstly COE to a right of abode, it is not hideously expensive compared to an entry clearance, which is 4- 5 times that amount , and there is nothing barring a British Citizen having a CEO and also a British Passport. A COE is put in a foreign, and it acts as a proof of a person's british citizenship status.
Hi Obie, you are misinformed. My points were absolutely not wrong. First, COE is expensive compared to a passport (about five times as much), which is the appropriate comparator.Obie wrote:The above is wrong.
Firstly COE to a right of abode, it is not hideously expensive compared to an entry clearance, which is 4- 5 times that amount , and there is nothing barring a British Citizen having a CEO and also a British Passport. A COE is put in a foreign, and it acts as a proof of a person's british citizenship status.
This is a very good point on which I had not reflected before. Thank you for bringing it to my attention.Indguru90 wrote:Third, the COE is not evidence of citizenship, it is evidence of the right of abode. The former derives from the British Nationality Act, the latter from the Immigration Act.
Someone under 30 can only have RoA if he is a British citizen.Indguru90 wrote:Third, the COE is not evidence of citizenship, it is evidence of the right of abode. The former derives from the British Nationality Act, the latter from the Immigration Act.
I'm the one who said 'policy', not Obie.Indguru90 wrote:Fourth, it is a matter of statute, not policy, that a British citizen cannot have both a passport and a COE, see Immigration (Certificate of Entitlement to the Right of Abode)
As a lawyer I disagree. The word "statute" is protean, just like "common law". At its most basic, it means written law, whether passed by Her Majesty in Parliament, a devolved assembly, or a minister pursuant to a power enshrined in primary legislation. In that sense, even a bye-law partakes of the character of statute law. Within that group, you may then further distinguish by using "statute" in the sense of primary legislation. However, "statute" is not a legal term in the traditional sense and hence does not have one fixed meaning. There is nothing inappropriate in characterising secondary legislation as statutory (which it is), to contrast it to prerogative power or third-source power.secret.simon wrote:Being utterly pedantic, but regulations are not statute. They might be part of the law, but they are not statute. In English law, "Statute" only refers to Acts of Parliament and possibly other primary legislation (Acts of the National Assembly of Wales). Regulations are secondary/delegated legislation.
secret.simon wrote: The regulations raise an interesting hypothetical question. A person who already has a British citizen passport cannot get a CoE-RoA, as you have pointed out. But can such a person apply simultaneously for a Coe-RoA and a passport, given that at the time of application, he did not hold a British citizen passport?
With respect, Obie, I don't think it's me who's missing the point. I said nowhere in my previous posts that the passport application would be invalidated. What I did say was that the ECO dealing with the COE application is obliged to check with HMPO whether there are passport details on file. The ECO is entitled at his discretion, based on the statutory (sorry, secret.simon) prohibition on holding both a passport and a COE, to at least suspend the COE application pending determination of the passport application. This would be a terrible waste of £423.Obie wrote:You are totally missing the point on the COA.
Obie wrote: The OP is entitled to apply for the COA which he suggested, and that will not invalidate the Passport application.
Obie wrote:I was seeking to relay to you, that the COA does not preclude the issuance of Passport. It makes not sense if a person hold a British Passort to also hold a COA. The OP wants to see his child, and passport takes a long period, and he is entitled to COA .
Obie wrote:The 1971 Act sets out who has a right of abode. The Certificate is merely a confirmation, and does not confer rights.
Obie wrote:For practical reason, the regulation provides that a person who has a passport cannot be issued a COA , as they already has the means of confirmation of their right, there is no need for double confirmation. It does not mean that they don't have the right of abode, which the 1971 acts confers on them. It just that secretary of state will not issue two documents to them at a time as it makes no sense.
Yup, as long as the DOB is after 31/12/82 and the person has a COE the necessary implication is that the holder's a BC. But a COE is not regarded as primary evidence of citizenship, e.g. when having to prove nationality for a restricted post in the civil service. Agreed that this makes little sense, but then most of our nationality laws are a perplexing mess of nonsense, aren't they... I admit this thread has become too pedantic for the purposes of the original question though.Richard W wrote:@Krishnam: There's nothing of help to you in this post, I'm afraid.
Someone under 30 can only have RoA if he is a British citizen.Indguru90 wrote:Third, the COE is not evidence of citizenship, it is evidence of the right of abode. The former derives from the British Nationality Act, the latter from the Immigration Act.
Wasn't directed at Obie, general observation.Richard W wrote:I'm the one who said 'policy', not Obie.Indguru90 wrote:Fourth, it is a matter of statute, not policy, that a British citizen cannot have both a passport and a COE, see Immigration (Certificate of Entitlement to the Right of Abode)
Right of abode is the unconditional right to live in the UK. It flows from the citizenship. The only people who have it are either British citizens or were commonwealth citizens with a British-born parent or grandparent at midnight on 1st January 1983. All British citizens have right of abode. One cannot apply for RoA: one may merely ask for acknowledgement that one has it.krishnam wrote:Do I need to apply for ROA (Right of Abode) and then COE or both are same?
Can you tell us a little more about yourself.? Like parents BC? How did you find the process.anony88 wrote:Thanks to the guidance provided and experience shared in this forum that I got my child's COE ROA from India within 10 days !!
j-i-j-o wrote:Can you tell us a little more about yourself.? Like parents BC? How did you find the process.anony88 wrote:Thanks to the guidance provided and experience shared in this forum that I got my child's COE ROA from India within 10 days !!
Honestly if I had known about this COE ROA earlier I could have applied for the same instead of the passport which takes for ever.