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I have a horrible feeling that the Passport Office is challenging the birth certificate on the basis that the OP is from Pakistan.secret.simon wrote: ↑Thu Aug 31, 2017 9:57 pmHow did your father acquire British citizenship? Was he naturalised or registered? Or was he born in the UK? If so, the best proof would be his naturalisation/registration/birth certificate, your parents' marriage certificate and your birth certificate.
Dare one asks how this works? Right of abode comes automatically, although it may be lost separately to citizenships (Immigration Act 1971 Section 2A); there is no 'entitlement' to it. I've looked at the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 Section 10 ("Right of abode: certificate of entitlement") and the Immigration (Certificate of Entitlement to Right of Abode in the United Kingdom) Regulations 2006. I can't see where an entitlement to a certificate of entitlement arises. In particular, prohibiting holders of British citizen passports from having certificates of entitlement was introduced at best by statutory instrument.
They still asking the same thing which they were asked 2 years before. They mentioned We don't deals with Immegration and right of abode or anything. We want only what we asked to provide before 2 years.
Richard W wrote: ↑Sat Sep 02, 2017 9:51 amDare one asks how this works? Right of abode comes automatically, although it may be lost separately to citizenships (Immigration Act 1971 Section 2A); there is no 'entitlement' to it. I've looked at the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 Section 10 ("Right of abode: certificate of entitlement") and the Immigration (Certificate of Entitlement to Right of Abode in the United Kingdom) Regulations 2006. I can't see where an entitlement to a certificate of entitlement arises. In particular, prohibiting holders of British citizen passports from having certificates of entitlement was introduced at best by statutory instrument.
Interesting. So the department issuing the CoE-RoA have accepted that you are a British citizen.
What documents did they think were missing?
No, that's how you come to have right of abode. I'm asking how it is that you have, as JAJ reports, an entitlement to a certificate of entitlement to right of abode. I'm wondering if this might result from there having been a right of appeal against a refusal of a CoE of RoA.
While Jhaider is looking for the precise request, I would remind you that only a few years ago the list of supporting documents included documents that only make sense if one needed confirmation that the alleged parents were the biological father and mother. Even now, posts on this forum will show that people in India are having to provide evidence that the claimed mother was pregnant at the relevant time. This probably relates to a period when Immigration Officers frequently doubted that children from the subcontinent were the children of their claimed parents.secret.simon wrote: ↑Sat Sep 02, 2017 2:56 pmIf you are asked to reapply, I think the following is all the proof that you need.
Surprisingly, or shamefully, from 6th April 2015, there is no longer any right of appeal against a refusal of a CoE-RoA.
They have refused my passport application in 2013 when I don't had right of abode that time .Richard W wrote: ↑Sat Sep 02, 2017 8:04 pmNo, that's how you come to have right of abode. I'm asking how it is that you have, as JAJ reports, an entitlement to a certificate of entitlement to right of abode. I'm wondering if this might result from there having been a right of appeal against a refusal of a CoE of RoA.
Hello Everyone,