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If child had had CSI she could be considered to be a selfsuffcient qualified person and could have acquired PR status (and an optional DCPR) in her own right.kuen wrote:Hi noajtham and thanks for your reply and confirming that the correct Section is 3(1)
The Child has been in the UK since March 2011, the parents acquired citizenship in March 2015 and September 2015 respectively. So, I guess I can answer that question myself, the child did not achieve 5 years of residence before the parents becoming British.
The child has been in the UK for 5,5 years now, and we can prove it, that was the line of the Home Office - to prove the PR status as a part of the citizenship application, on the basis that we now have no grounds for applying for a document certifying PR. So, the PR right is a fact, and we will prove it, but we cannot apply for the document certifying that, thus going straight through the citizenship route.
Does this make more sense?
Also, due to the age of the child (she is 6), she hasn't held any form of insurance, as none has been required. And the very Permanent Residence form does not require one for minors.
Your further thoughts would be appreciated.
Thanks a lot
Yes, your child does not appear to have acquired PR (not enough time and no CSI so not a selfsufficient person; not enough time even if sponsored by parent).kuen wrote:Thanks you very much for your reply.
Can I ask for clarification on one last point - do you agree that as things stand we have no grounds for applying for PR for our daughter and such application would be refused?
If yes, that would only leave us the option of discretionary registration, as advised by the Home Office, but in a sense that would help because we could explain in our application that we do it for lack of any other alternatives?
Thanks again
1) Because simply living in UK for 5 years is not enough.kuen wrote:Hi noajthan,
Thanks again (for the link as well) and apologies for dwelling into the details further, but I want to make sure I understand the full picture:
1) Why do you say "not enough time" (when she has lived here more than five years)?
2) Why do you say "no CSI" if it is not required for minors?
Do you mean it in the sense that she does not have 5 years of residence here before we became British, and she cannot prove she has been self-sufficient as there is no CSI, all of that in addition to the fact that we are now British, so she cannot apply for PR with one of us as her sponsor because British Citizenship supersedes PR status and our EEA citizenship as far as the Home Office is concerned.
Thanks for your patience and your final confirmation that my understanding of the above is correct.
Have a nice day!
As you will see from a full reading of the linked HO guidance document, there is no formal timeline for residence for a child applying for discretionary registration.kuen wrote:Thanks again. It never occurred to me we could naturalise too early, but obviously it is possible, I can now see it.
One last thing I do not understand, please - now that we need to apply for discretionary registration as citizen, do we need to wait till my daughter has been the the UK for at least 6 years (based on the 5+1 formula, assuming they will be seeking to establish she could have potentially been granted PR and then could have held it for 1 year), or is it fully irrelevant in our case?
All the best!
Congratulations.kuen wrote:Hi,
Just wanted to update you that our daughter has now been granted British citizenship under Section 3(1) with an EEA MN1 application.
To sum up the details - she did not have PR, but along with the citizenship application we also sent proof that she had resided for 5 years in the UK and that one of the parents would have been a viable PR sponsor if it wasn't for the "tiny" detail that now both parets are British.
Hope that information helps. Thanks for all your help!