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You can apply for COE/ROA instead to bring child to UK then apply for passport from here.Feb4 wrote:I need help.
I am British, living in the UK. My wife is a Nigerian and she gave birth to our son in Nigeria last year.
She applied for a spouse visa and has got it; She will be here in UK on 5 March 2015.
My son is British by descent since at the time of his birth I was already a British citizen.
If we apply for a British passport for my son in Nigeria, the process takes at least 12 weeks to complete(too long).
However, if he is in the UK and apply for a British passport, it takes about 3 weeks.
In that case, can I apply for a child visitor for my son to accompany his mother on 5 March, and then apply for a British passport for him whilst here in the UK?
Thanks.
All British citizens have right of abode where as visit visa application has requirements which need to be met and if person dealing with application is not satisfied, they might refuse the application whereas ROA is entitlement.Feb4 wrote:Many thanks, akhurshid.
That's a viable way to go. It's good to know we have options.
However, it is more expensive and the processing times are no shorter than applying for a child visitor visa for my son.
The goal is to get him in the UK and apply for his British passport from inside the UK. So, we are leaning towards a child visitor visa.
Do you think a certificate of entitlement is a better way to go? If so, can you suggest why?
Thanks again.
Cheers Vinny, I didn't know that.vinny wrote:If they know that the child is British, then they should refuse a visa application.
Thank you very much. A very good advice, akhurshid.akhurshid wrote: All British citizens have right of abode where as visit visa application has requirements which need to be met and if person dealing with application is not satisfied, they might refuse the application whereas ROA is entitlement.
That is the only thing I can think of. I don't know anything about fees either.
Thanks, Vinny. You've been helpful to me over many years.vinny wrote: refuse a visa application.
Yes, I was. I naturalised.vinny wrote:If you are British otherwise than by descent at the time of child's birth, then you are correct.
Yes, the passport application requires roughly the same. However, this is not uniform across countries. I think for countries they consider high-fraud areas, the requirements are more involving than for low-fraud areas. For example, an American birth certificate would be more trusted by them than a Nigerian one; in this case, the requirements are more involving if applying with a Nigerian birth certificate.vinny wrote:I think it's reasonable to expect them to process the application as if it was a first child British passport application. Does the passport application require the same, compared with what they are requesting?
Remember that the referees who sign the form must know the applicant, who in this case is the child, not the parents. There may be a problem if the child is in India, but the referee is in the UK and has not met the child.gre.bm691 wrote:If you look at the passport application in the UK, nowhere does it mention that the applicant has to be within the country. Especially for infants as it will be you attending the interview, if required.