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For children born before 1 July 2006, you may need to consider whether a child was ‘legitimate’.
Legitimacy depends on where the father was domiciled at the time of the child’s birth. If the laws of the country where the father is domiciled recognise the child as legitimate, then the child will be regarded as legitimate for the purposes of the British nationality law.
This means that the following can be regarded as ‘legitimate’:
• a child whose parents were married at the time of the birth
• a child whose parents were not married at the time of the birth, but married at a later date – if that meant that the child was treated as having been legitimated by the marriage, according to the laws of the place where the father was domiciled
• a child who was treated as legitimate by the laws of the country where the father was domiciled at the time of the birth, irrespective of whether the parents were married or not
Thank you so much that reply was really fast, I am also very amazed that my immigration lawyer has never mentioned this form to me even though I fit within the requirements. I am also very concerned as to why my leave to remain visa renewal is taking so long
It is a limited leave to remain visa to stay with family in the UK, me and my mum both have the same visa and we applied for an extension/ renewal from the 3rd of October and have done my biometric fingerprint and picture however nothing else has come after that, I am scared because my mum claimed carers allowance for a few months as we did not know it was not allowed to us, as soon as we found out we stopped it and offered to pay the money back but the carers allowance people said no it's fine. I have lived in the UK from 2006 and came to join my British father however we had a lot of legal troubles, we were denied Indefinite leave to remain after 2.5 years back in 2009 because me and my mum lived with my grandmother, she was terminally ill and my father would sleep at a different house but would stay over the whole day. My parents were not "married" when I was born so the passport office initially refused me a British passport. Sorry I explained everything there. My mother and i are currently on a 10 year long residence route That started in 2012 however recently finding this change in the law may mean I can be a British citizen before 2022.
Hi Simon, I have submitted the UKF form thank you so much for the help, I was just wondering if you can read my thread and let me know anything else pleasesecret.simon wrote: ↑Mon Feb 18, 2019 2:59 pmA marriage is generally dated from the date of the marriage certificate.
Children born before 2006 could only inherit British citizenship from their father if their father was married to their mother at the time of the birth of the child. There was a provision for children born before the marriage to be legitimised by the subsequent marriage of their parents, if the place where they married allows for such legitimisation. Apparently, Pakistani law does not (See Page 18 of the Legitimisation and Domicile document).
However, as your father is a British citizen, you can register as a British citizen on Form UKF. The fees are £80, that too only if you are over 18 years when the application is decided.
EDIT: to Zimba, as the domicile of an illegitimate child follows the mother, it may be Pakistani law that would apply in this case, not English or Scottish law, as the case may be.