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The OP would have been a British citizen at birth automatically by operation of Section 1(1) of the BNA 1981 if the parents were married. Therefore s/he can register as a British citizen under Section 4G/on Form UKF if s/he has the evidence.(1) A person (“P”) is entitled to be registered as a British citizen on an application made under this section if—
(a) P meets the general conditions; and
(b) at any time in the period after commencement, P would have automatically become a British citizen at birth by the operation of any provision of this Act or the British Nationality (Falkland Islands) Act 1983, had P's mother been married to P's natural father at the time of P's birth.

Mother doesn't have PR, Home Office destroys documents then how else would they be able to verify my father's proof? He got in mid-2000, and the link you provided talks about documents post-1998, so wouldn't the Home Office have an electronic copy?secret.simon wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 12:34 pmBy waiting until past the 18th birthday, the OP has (foolishly in my opinion) destroyed any chance of having registered as a British citizen (under Section 1(3)/on Form MN1) based on her mother's PR (assuming that the mother had acquired PR under EU law).
I think the OP has grounds for applying on Form UKF. That is the correct form to use for people applying under Section 4G of the British Nationality Act 1981, which states;
The OP would have been a British citizen at birth automatically by operation of Section 1(1) of the BNA 1981 if the parents were married. Therefore s/he can register as a British citizen under Section 4G/on Form UKF if s/he has the evidence.(1) A person (“P”) is entitled to be registered as a British citizen on an application made under this section if—
(a) P meets the general conditions; and
(b) at any time in the period after commencement, P would have automatically become a British citizen at birth by the operation of any provision of this Act or the British Nationality (Falkland Islands) Act 1983, had P's mother been married to P's natural father at the time of P's birth.
That is where the OP will face a problem. The Home Office periodically destroy their documentation past specified timeframes and given the age of the issue, is very likely to have destroyed any documentation on the non-EU father having acquired ILR. The only person holding such evidence will likely be the father himself.
The other proof cited by the OP (hospital/school records) are irrelevant, as they do not contain proof of the father's ILR at the point of the OP's birth in the UK. For registration under Section 4G to succceed, the OP needs to prove specifically that
a) the father was an ILR holder at the time of the OP's birth;
b) that the OP was born in the UK.
My advice to the OP would be to make up with the father, acquire the documentary proof from him and make the application as soon as it is possible.
Do you mean in the middle of 2000 (the year) or the 2000s (the decade)?
You could give it a go, but remember that it is your responsibility to provide the evidence, not theirs.British2001 wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 3:45 pmthe link you provided talks about documents post-1998, so wouldn't the Home Office have an electronic copy?

Both. You can only apply for an SAR for yourself, not for your father (or any other member of your family). And the department that is asked need only respond with the information that it holds on you. It will not get you the information held by other government bodies/departments.British2001 wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 4:16 pmSome people said SARs, but then some said it only applies to yourself as an individual or to departments themselves.




How? I asked two different questions.