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Assuming you mean your wife wants to have the baby in the UK? She will have to pay the for the birth at 150% cost, which for a normal uncomplicated birth is around £3,000.I am currently in Egypt and my wife wants to give birth here because she is more comfortable with her own doctors. She holds a 10-year family visitor visa (Not a huge cost difference between 5 and 10 years) so she has no problem travelling to the UK. I was planning to return to the UK in approximately 3 years to settle with my wife (spouse visa route) and child.
It's any 3 year period prior to your child's birth. Choose the one that's the easiest for you to prove.WasimAslam wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2017 6:37 pmOk So I am British and hold a British passport and since the age of 6 months I have lived in UK and only started spending long periods of time in Egypt since I got married in 2012...so would it for example count if I was in the UK from Jan 2008 to Dec 2010 which is of course before the childs birth and having spent less then 270 day outside?? Or does it have to be the previous 3 years immediately from when the child is born/or application (MN1) is made?
You could use school records, employment records, leases, etc. to show when you were in the UK. Passport stamps would show some of the time you spent outside and form MN1 asks you to submit a list of time spent outside the UK during the qualifying period.WasimAslam wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2017 6:37 pmAnd would the HO not know if I was outside of the UK through passport use etc...what I am trying to say is would that not be proof of me being inside the UK for any given period?
Assuming you were born after 1975 (or after your father was naturalised in 1975), you should be fine. I don't think there is any requirement to submit your application from the UK.WasimAslam wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2017 6:37 pmAlso my father became a British citizen otherwise then by descent in 1975.
So based on the above all being well and good do I have a good case for registering my child as a British citizen and completing the registration from within Egypt? Or do I do this from the UK?
If your child is stateless (i.e., you choose not to register him or her as an Egyptian national), then you do not need to prove the three year qualifying period. However, the Home Office might challenge you on why your child is not an Egyptian citizen. If you can prove that you satisfy the three year requirement, I would do that and save yourself the potential trouble. If you do hold off on registering your child as an Egyptian national anyway, you can send a covering letter with the application explaining your child currently holds no nationality and thus satisfies the requirements to be registered as a citizen of the UK under Section 3(2) of the BNA 1981 based on your citizenship and that of your father alone, but that you are including evidence of your own residence in the UK anyway to strengthen the claim.WasimAslam wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2017 6:37 pmWhile I am here 1 last question please...I've been told here by a local not to apply for Egyptian Nationality for the child as this will help in getting the British nationality if the child has no nationality..have you every heard of such a thing?
So based on that, I would say you needMN1 Guide, page 30 wrote:*If you are required to send your parent’s or grandparent’s British passport and you are making your application by post you can send a complete and full copy of their current passport. Every page of the passport must be copied including any blank pages.
- Child’s birth certificate showing the parents’ names
- Parents’ marriage certificate (if the father is a British citizen)
- British parent’s birth certificate or passport*
- British grandparent’s birth certificate, registration or naturalisation certificate or passport*
- Grandparents’ marriage certificate
- Evidence of residence*
- Section 3(2) – evidence that the British parent lived in the UK for a period of 3 years at some time before the child’s birth
I don't think you need to bother with this. Your passport and your father's passport are proof enough of your citizenship (and his). If the Home Office want extra documents, they'll get in touch to ask for them. If they do, I suspect they'll ask for your father's naturalisation certificate (the original). You can send that with the application instead of your father's passport, if he'll let you, but it's fine to just send the passport (or copy of it). It's easy to overthink these applications, but it's best to stick to following the instructions in the guide until the Home Office get in touch with further instructions.WasimAslam wrote: ↑Thu Sep 21, 2017 7:21 pmCan I just submit passport/copies…or do I get an official Nationality Status doc (£234) from the HO just to be safe?
All sounds good.WasimAslam wrote: ↑Thu Sep 21, 2017 7:21 pm• I lived in UK from age of 6 months so attended Nursery, Primary & Secondary Schools, College and University. I have also worked part time from the age of 16 until 23 before becoming self-employed. I can easily prove 3 years of having lived in the UK through pay slips etc.
As stated above, if you send this, it should be the original certificate. However, it's probably easier for both of you to send the full copy of his passport instead. The worst case scenario is that the Home Office will get in touch to ask for the naturalisation certificate.WasimAslam wrote: ↑Thu Sep 21, 2017 7:21 pm• My father has a “Certificate of Registration As A Citizen Of The United Kingdom And Colonies” from March 1975. So a copy of this should be sufficient right? Or do I have should I get an official Nationality Status Doc as above?
Send it to the Home Office address in Liverpool:WasimAslam wrote: ↑Thu Sep 21, 2017 7:21 pmIn your previous post you mentioned i don't have to be inside the UK to make the MN1 application...Just in case you know...who would I submit the application and supporting docs to? I mean would it be the UK Consulate/Embassy in Egypt or..?
I don't think you need to inform the British consulate of your marriage, and consular birth certificates can only be issued to children who are UK citizens at birth, which your child will not be (hence the need to register using MN1). However, as noted above, you will need official translations of any documents that aren't in English.WasimAslam wrote: ↑Thu Sep 21, 2017 7:21 pmShould i be registering documents like my civil marriage and the babies birth certificates with the British Consulate?
I think JAJ was saying that your child may be a citizen of Pakistan automatically (and regardless of whether he or she is registered as one). Since you plan on sending proof of your time in living in the UK, this isn't that important to your MN1 application, but you may wish to seek advice on whether your child will automatically be considered a citizen of Pakistan at birth or not.WasimAslam wrote: ↑Sat Sep 23, 2017 1:17 pmAlso you said the child may automatically be Pakistani...i am hoping he/she can be British first, if the child wants the Pakistani nationality when grown up then thats his/her choice. Or are you saying its something i would be required to do?
It is possible to send a form MN1 application directly from Egypt to the Home Office- although you should always use a courier (DHL, etc.)WasimAslam wrote: ↑Sat Sep 23, 2017 1:17 pmAnd yes of course i will come back and let you know how everything turns out. The MN1 application process seems like something i could do my self but will most likely get a lawyer to handle the process on my behalf from within the UK...hopefully this can be done considering i will be in Egypt once the child is born there.
British citizenship did not exist in 1975. The status was created on 1 January 1983. Your father was registered as a Citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies (CUKC). Although he was a CUKC otherwise than by descent, some CUKCs (example- from colonies) did not become British citizens, or became British citizens by descent."The Home Office will probably need evidence that the British grandfather of the child- registered in the U.K. in 1975- became a British citizen otherwise than by descent in 1983."
My father was registered in 1975 as a British Citizen...would he not have been a Citizen otherwise than by descent at that point and not in 1983?
Not required to do anything. However- you need to show 3 years U.K. residence for the Section 3(2) since the Home Office would likely not accept the child is stateless unless you can show that the child hasn't yet acquired Pakistani citizenship. The Home Office view of Pakistan law is at page 25:Also you said the child may automatically be Pakistani...i am hoping he/she can be British first, if the child wants the Pakistani nationality when grown up then thats his/her choice. Or are you saying its something i would be required to do?
Since you were born before 1983, the requirement is that your father became a British citizen otherwise than by descent on 1.1.1983. (not that you had a British citizen otherwise than by descent parent when you were born).WasimAslam wrote: ↑Mon Sep 25, 2017 11:00 amJust a little confused on point 3 as JAJ you mentioned that my father wouldn't have been a BC otherwise then by descent until 1983 which would be after my birth. Or am I reading it wrong and his registration in 1975 is sufficient for thsee qualifying points on the MN1application route under 3.2?
How did you acquire your British citizenship? When and where were you born?
Hi Abuljeem, Tea_rocket, JAJ,