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You are wrong, the council was correct. The requirement to be physically present at the start of the 5 year qualifying period for citizenship is the same for every applicant.rely1458 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:17 pmEEA citizens effectively need to be residing in the UK for six years, not five. Does he have PR? When he got his PR, he should have received a letter with it stating the date he had become a permanent resident, and that he could apply for naturalisation on the anniversary of that date (12 months).
You state that he already had PR for a year, which means he was entitled to apply. The council was in the wrong.
HM wouldn't have refused the application however. They simply would have sent him another declaration form to sign since it's just a matter of a few days.CR001 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:18 pmYou are wrong, the council was correct. The requirement to be physically present at the start of the 5 year qualifying period for citizenship is the same for every applicant.rely1458 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:17 pmEEA citizens effectively need to be residing in the UK for six years, not five. Does he have PR? When he got his PR, he should have received a letter with it stating the date he had become a permanent resident, and that he could apply for naturalisation on the anniversary of that date (12 months).
You state that he already had PR for a year, which means he was entitled to apply. The council was in the wrong.
Many members have been refused for being out for a couple of days.rely1458 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:20 pmHM wouldn't have refused the application however. They simply would have sent him another declaration form to sign since it's just a matter of a few days.CR001 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:18 pmYou are wrong, the council was correct. The requirement to be physically present at the start of the 5 year qualifying period for citizenship is the same for every applicant.rely1458 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:17 pmEEA citizens effectively need to be residing in the UK for six years, not five. Does he have PR? When he got his PR, he should have received a letter with it stating the date he had become a permanent resident, and that he could apply for naturalisation on the anniversary of that date (12 months).
You state that he already had PR for a year, which means he was entitled to apply. The council was in the wrong.
So I guess it depends on the caseworker then. A friend of mine applied through NCS. The application was sent a week early and HM sent him a letter with a new declaration form to sign and date. He was told if he did that they could proceed with the application. Failure to return the declaration signed would result in the rejection of the application.CR001 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:23 pmMany members have been refused for being out for a couple of days.rely1458 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:20 pmHM wouldn't have refused the application however. They simply would have sent him another declaration form to sign since it's just a matter of a few days.CR001 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:18 pmYou are wrong, the council was correct. The requirement to be physically present at the start of the 5 year qualifying period for citizenship is the same for every applicant.rely1458 wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 4:17 pmEEA citizens effectively need to be residing in the UK for six years, not five. Does he have PR? When he got his PR, he should have received a letter with it stating the date he had become a permanent resident, and that he could apply for naturalisation on the anniversary of that date (12 months).
You state that he already had PR for a year, which means he was entitled to apply. The council was in the wrong.