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As I read it- the Tribunal did not dispute whether or not the child is stateless. What was under review- and relevant for the Immigration Rules- is whether the child was "admissible" to another country. A stateless child may still have an entitlement to either citizenship of another country, or admission to another country (although this may be impractical without access to a travel document).secret.simon wrote:Be aware that intentionally causing the child to be stateless by not registering the child with the authorities of the parents' citizenship may not make the child stateless.
indeed, I just located the judgment on that in another thread.JAJ wrote:For British Nationality Act applications based on statelessness- Schedule 2 and some section 3(2) cases- it is irrelevant whether or not the person has entitlement to a non-British nationality or resident status in another country.
I am not sure i accept that.JAJ wrote:As I read it- the Tribunal did not dispute whether or not the child is stateless. What was under review- and relevant for the Immigration Rules- is whether the child was "admissible" to another country. A stateless child may still have an entitlement to either citizenship of another country, or admission to another country (although this may be impractical without access to a travel document).secret.simon wrote:Be aware that intentionally causing the child to be stateless by not registering the child with the authorities of the parents' citizenship may not make the child stateless.
For British Nationality Act applications based on statelessness- Schedule 2 and some section 3(2) cases- it is irrelevant whether or not the person has entitlement to a non-British nationality or resident status in another country.
Unclear what point is being made.Obie wrote: I am not sure i accept that.
Every signatory of the UN Convention on the prevention of Statelessness 1961, has an obligation to prevent stateless.
It is imperative that there is evidence, as a matter of law, that a person will be stateless for the provision in Schedule 2 to be engaged.
For once, I agree with you.Obie wrote:You mentioned that for the provision in Schedule 2 to be engaged, it matters not, whether a child could qualify for citizenship for another country.
I am of the view that for that provision to be engaged, a child must not have right to nationality of another country.
Therefore if a UK-born child is deliberately kept stateless for the first five years of their life, that gives them an entitlement to register as a British citizen under Section 3, Schedule 2 of the BNA 1981.36. For the purposes of the statutory provisions in issue, a person is stateless if he has no nationality. Ability to acquire a nationality is irrelevant for these purposes. A child born on or after 3 December 2004, outside India, of parents at least one of whom is an Indian national, and who has not been to India, is not an Indian national unless registration of the birth has taken place in accordance with the provisions of the Citizenship Act 1955 (India) as amended. If the child has no other nationality, the child is stateless for the purposes of paragraph 3 of Schedule 2 to the British Nationality Act 1981 and, if the other requirements of that paragraph are met, is entitled to be registered as a British citizen. If, therefore, C's birth had on the date of the decision under challenge not been registered, she is entitled to British Citizenship
I think it will be unlikely.Obie wrote:I believe the UK government will seek to lobby the Indian government to change the law, like they did the Irish Authorities.
Other countries too- including (as far as I am aware), South Africa, Singapore and Brazil.secret.simon wrote: Secondly, such a requirement is not unique to India. To my knowledge, Australia and New Zealand also do not allow automatic acquisition of citizenship by descent abroad, but makes it conditional on registration with consular officials abroad.
If they were to go to the trouble of putting an amendment to the British Nationality Act in place- possibly as part of the next Immigration Bill- it would be to change the law, rather than to "clarify" it. In other words, add wording to Schedule 2 to add something like a requirement that the applicant not be entitled to acquire any other citizenship or nationality. Australia already has a similar provision in section 21(8) of the Australian Citizenship Act 2007:Thirdly, it may be (not sure how it would play out in the current political environment) easier to rush a bill through the UK Parliament clarifying the law than to invest in international diplomatic conversations that may go nowhere. If the law were to be merely clarificatory (something on the lines of adding a paragraph to the interpretations section, that statelessness means that all avenues to gaining a citizenship have been exhausted before applying for British citizenship), I think it may go through.
The wording of the British Nationality Act is very clear- it refers to statelessness in itself and does not impose additional conditions or criteria. Parliament is free to add these should it so choose. If it chooses not to do so, it's unclear why anyone should expect the courts to go beyond the requirements of the statute.Alternatively of course, the government may appeal the judgment to either the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court, as this judgment may have the perverse effect of increasing intentional statelessness.
It's hard to imagine who would oppose it. Those of us who aren't refugees, asylum seekers, or from the EU have very few politicians who are willing to speak up for us as it is (not that the other groups shouldn't get at least as much advocacy as they currently do). I doubt anyone is going to defend the way the parents of the child at the centre of this case have gamed the rules in order to get their child citizenship and ease their own paths to regularising their statuses in the UK.secret.simon wrote:Thirdly, it may be (not sure how it would play out in the current political environment) easier to rush a bill through the UK Parliament clarifying the law than to invest in international diplomatic conversations that may go nowhere. If the law were to be merely clarificatory (something on the lines of adding a paragraph to the interpretations section, that statelessness means that all avenues to gaining a citizenship have been exhausted before applying for British citizenship), I think it may go through.
I would oppose it. They haven't 'gamed' anything if those are the rules in place. They are just following those rules. From a practical standpoint, how can you require that these people seek out foreign citizenships of other countries for somebody who may never set foot in that country ever? And what would 'exhausted all avenues' even mean? Is the UK willing to dive into the nationality laws of the world's nations to sort out if 'all avenues' have been exhausted'? I don't think so! They've already made a bit of a mess of things with the rules have in place for the UK itself.Tea_Rocket wrote:It's hard to imagine who would oppose it. Those of us who aren't refugees, asylum seekers, or from the EU have very few politicians who are willing to speak up for us as it is (not that the other groups shouldn't get at least as much advocacy as they currently do). I doubt anyone is going to defend the way the parents of the child at the centre of this case have gamed the rules in order to get their child citizenship and ease their own paths to regularising their statuses in the UK.secret.simon wrote:Thirdly, it may be (not sure how it would play out in the current political environment) easier to rush a bill through the UK Parliament clarifying the law than to invest in international diplomatic conversations that may go nowhere. If the law were to be merely clarificatory (something on the lines of adding a paragraph to the interpretations section, that statelessness means that all avenues to gaining a citizenship have been exhausted before applying for British citizenship), I think it may go through.
How would the UK government even *know* that I've registered or not registered my child with my country's consulate? In my particular case, that is business strictly between me, my child, and the United States. And it is absolutely none of the UK's concern. They can change that ofcourse, but there is absolutely no hint that they ever will implement such a law.Obie wrote: They can takeep enfor cement action against parent.
I'm certain that the UK would far more simply just change the law rather than start taking children away from their parents on the possibility that the parents might actually invoke the existing UK law (arguably) in their favor.Obie wrote:Threaten to put their children in care and remove them if they do not apply to register them.
And then when the child turns five and is still stateless? And the parents submit their application anyway?Obie wrote:They could take those steps before the children turn 5 years .
If said child were born British (so slightly off-topic), it would be of the UK's concern as soon as a passport was applied for.ouflak1 wrote:How would the UK government even *know* that I've registered or not registered my child with my country's consulate? In my particular case, that is business strictly between me, my child, and the United States. And it is absolutely none of the UK's concern. They can change that ofcourse, but there is absolutely no hint that they ever will implement such a law.
The UK also comes to mind. Infants born in the UK become liable to charges for NHS treatment at the age of 3 months unless they have a suitable immigration status - see Chapter 1 of the "Guidance on implementing the overseas visitor hospital charging regulations 2015", linked to from https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... egulations .ouflak1 wrote:There are countries that will actually penalize the parents for not acquiring some kind of visa permission within a period of time of the child's birth. Oman comes to mind. But even that doesn't involve the dystopian measures of removing the child from the parents or anything else so extreme.
Yeah probably best to just stick with the topic of stateless children, as there are so many other possibilies deserving their own topic. It would be much simpler if the UK had a nice pure beautiful form of jus soli.Richard W wrote: If said child were born British...
But the parents can just pay any NHS fees as they come up, if they ever do. The parents never have to acquire any visa for the child, and they certainly never have to attempt to contact any government(s) about the possibily of citizenship(s); possibilities which may or may not exist.Richard W wrote:The UK also comes to mind. Infants born in the UK become liable to charges for NHS treatment at the age of 3 months unless they have a suitable immigration status - see Chapter 1 of the "Guidance on implementing the overseas visitor hospital charging regulations 2015", linked to from https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... egulations .ouflak1 wrote:There are countries that will actually penalize the parents for not acquiring some kind of visa permission within a period of time of the child's birth. Oman comes to mind. But even that doesn't involve the dystopian measures of removing the child from the parents or anything else so extreme.