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bdoli wrote:Good morning everyone
Previously I was advised to get PR as an EEA national exercising treaty rights & then apply for daughter's British citizenship with form MN1.
Got PR dated May'16. Daughter born in UK on March'11 & we didn't apply for any nationality for her since birth till date. Myself Polish & husband Indian (he has applied for PR too)
Based on above, do we need to fill in MN1 section 1(3) or 1(3), child is NOT stateless.
Guide S3 (Stateless person)
Also, do we need letter/proof from Polish & Indian embassy stating that child has not acquired nationality of her parents. (Apparently Polish Embassy doesn't provide such letters) No you don't. Child is not stateless.
Please advise
Thank you
Thanks CR001CR001 wrote:bdoli wrote:Good morning everyone
Previously I was advised to get PR as an EEA national exercising treaty rights & then apply for daughter's British citizenship with form MN1.
Got PR dated May'16. Daughter born in UK on March'11 & we didn't apply for any nationality for her since birth till date. Myself Polish & husband Indian (he has applied for PR too)
Based on above, do we need to fill in MN1 section 1(3) or 1(3), child is NOT stateless.
Guide S3 (Stateless person)
Also, do we need letter/proof from Polish & Indian embassy stating that child has not acquired nationality of her parents. (Apparently Polish Embassy doesn't provide such letters) No you don't. Child is not stateless.
Please advise
Thank you
So, the child is not stateless, but a Polish citizen.Polish Nationality Law (on Wikipedia) wrote:Children born to at least one Polish parent acquire Polish citizenship irrespective of place of birth.
Thank you secret.simon. One more question & hopefully the last one. Slightly confused if we need to fill in section 3 or not.secret.simon wrote:Child is definitely a Polish citizen (Article 14(1) of the Polish Citizenship Law of 2009).So, the child is not stateless, but a Polish citizen.Polish Nationality Law (on Wikipedia) wrote:Children born to at least one Polish parent acquire Polish citizenship irrespective of place of birth.
Lack of passport does not mean that the child is stateless. Statelessness is a condition caused by act of law (of country of nationalities of parents and of the country of birth), not by parents refusing to or neglecting to apply for a passport.
List the child's citizenship as Polish.
Its 1(3), not 3(1) as stated above.ouflak1 wrote:Child was born in the UK, so Sections 3(1) through 3(5) do not apply to your child at all.
Outflak1 was referring to 3(1) NOT applying to OPs situation described.bruteforce wrote:Its 1(3), not 3(1) as stated above.ouflak1 wrote:Child was born in the UK, so Sections 3(1) through 3(5) do not apply to your child at all.
You need to complete this part of section 3 as it is applicable to you if you are EU citizen.Reading further in the same Section/Guidance, below is part of Section 3 form MN1:
3.13 – 3.14 If the child was born in the United Kingdom and one of the parents was an EEA national or Swiss national, this information is needed to establish whether the child may be a British citizen already or has a right to registration under section 1(3).
Do they need above info relating to section 1(3) since I already have PR dated May'16
Thanks CR001.CR001 wrote:You need to complete this part of section 3 as it is applicable to you if you are EU citizen.Reading further in the same Section/Guidance, below is part of Section 3 form MN1:
3.13 – 3.14 If the child was born in the United Kingdom and one of the parents was an EEA national or Swiss national, this information is needed to establish whether the child may be a British citizen already or has a right to registration under section 1(3).
Do they need above info relating to section 1(3) since I already have PR dated May'16