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Hmm, it seems the only way to get your British passport cancelled is to report it as lost or stolen.
Thanks, I don't really want to report my passport lost or stolen, I just want to cancel it voluntarily. I'm surprised there isn't an option to do this. I'll give the advice line a try and see what they say.secret.simon wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 2:04 pmHmm, it seems the only way to get your British passport cancelled is to report it as lost or stolen.
You can contact the Passport Adviceline for further advice (though experience on these forums with other Home Office contact centres has not been positive).
I'll give this a go though not in my initial communication as this might digress from my more pressing needs.secret.simon wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 2:04 pmOn a point of interest, if you plan to escalate the matter to the Home Office and your MP, it may be worth suggesting to them that the Home Office put in place a system like New Zealand, which allows NZ citizenship to be electronically linked to a non-NZ passport. That way, one does not even need a physical CoE-RoA.
There are certain caveats to this approach.
a) You would need to be a non-visa national to get onto the flight/ship.
b) You would need to inform the Home Office if your non-British passport is lost or stolen.
c) Your British citizenship is not recognised by any other country, which is also the case with a CoE-RoA.
As an aside, a thread covering why people with ILR are increasingly less likely to have vignettes and have moved over to BRPs.
Certainly there are a small number of pre-1983 non-British citizens with right of abode, but I guess nearly all people with the right of abode at present are British citizens. Anyway, I should have said "almost" only.secret.simon wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 12:21 pm
Not entirely true. There are some (a very small number, but they do exist) non-British Commonwealth citizens who have Right of Abode in the UK due to having been resident in the UK before 1983. We know that the OP is not one of them, but I'm just pointing out that RoA does not definitely prove that you are a British citizen. The only thing that an RoA does conclusively prove is that the OP is the citizen of a Commonwealth country who has the right to reside in the UK.
Also, we on these forums know what RoA is. But an immigration official in say China or Iran is unlikely to know the difference between an RoA vignette and an older ILR vignette or the difference between RoA and ILR. From their point of view, both of them give the holder the right to reside in the UK and that is likely all that they are interested in.
But, anyway, not all British passports allow for freedom of movement within the EU.secret.simon wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 2:04 pmAlso, remember that as CoE-RoA does not indicate your British citizenship, it does not allow for freedom of movement within the EU. To the best of my knowledge, there is no alternative to a British passport for travel within in the EU. But I could be wrong on this point.
What do you mean by that?AdInfernos wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 9:32 pm
But, anyway, not all British passports allow for freedom of movement within the EU.
British passports issued in the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands to British citizens who have no connection with the UK have an observation as follows:bruteforce wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 9:56 pmWhat do you mean by that?AdInfernos wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 9:32 pm
But, anyway, not all British passports allow for freedom of movement within the EU.
The holder is not entitled to benefit from EU provisions relating to employment or establishment
Thank you for the link to PRADO. I was not aware of that resource.AdInfernos wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 9:29 pmOn the immigration official recognising the vignette, checking the type of immigration documents issued by the UK or indeed other EU countries, is as easy as visiting PRADO at http://www.consilium.europa.eu/prado/en ... -page.html
True. Of course the Immigration officer's job is made easier because the front cover of British passports issued by the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man are visibly different from British passports issued in the UK.AdInfernos wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 10:19 pmBritish passports issued in the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands to British citizens who have no connection with the UK have an observation as follows:bruteforce wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 9:56 pmWhat do you mean by that?AdInfernos wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2017 9:32 pmBut, anyway, not all British passports allow for freedom of movement within the EU.The holder is not entitled to benefit from EU provisions relating to employment or establishment
I called the passport advice line who asked me to write a letter explaining that I wanted to voluntarily cancel my British passport in favour of a CoE-RoA on my non-UK passport, and send it together with my British passport to the Passport office. Apparently, voluntarily cancelling passports is not so uncommon, so I'm surprised they don't have a published process for it.
No I didn't, so that's not an issue... but the feeling of isolated treatment in the impounding of my ILR BRP given no one else has reported similar treatment is starting to feel harsh!!!
A British citizen entering without a British passport is possible.Where there is evidence that the carrier had acted on the advice of a representative of the United Kingdom Government, and it was reasonable, in the circumstances, for the carrier to rely on that advice.
Where, for example, a passenger has been carried on the advice of a UK mission abroad or a UK immigration officer, the charge will normally be waived.
Advice given on the authenticity of an individual document cannot always be regarded as definitive, particularly if advice is sought by telephone, and the Immigration Service has been unable to examine the document concerned. Furthermore, it is incumbent on the carrier when seeking advice, to provide full and accurate information as to why it has doubts over the particular passenger’s documentation.