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No and it's not the first time the HO is giving out misleading information over the phone.gcameo wrote:Is this correct
No. Your newly UK born child was born after you obtained PR so he was British from birth. You are not British yet and need to apply to become one.Can I use the same form i used to apply for my son to apply for the british passport instead of form AN - which is what I am filling now
Also, I just called Camden council to use their Nationality Checking Service and they said, they cannot do the service to me if I don't have ILR already.Jambo wrote:No and it's not the first time the HO is giving out misleading information over the phone.gcameo wrote:Is this correct
No. Your newly UK born child was born after you obtained PR so he was British from birth. You are not British yet and need to apply to become one.Can I use the same form i used to apply for my son to apply for the british passport instead of form AN - which is what I am filling now
See Q1, Q5 & Q6 in Citizenship FAQs - Common Questions - Read before posting.
She is an EEA national. registered for WRS in september 2007. Worked till november 2007. Maternity leave till sept 2009. Working in sainsbury's since sept 2009 till present. currently on maternity leave but still employee of sainsbury's. I have been in full time employment since 2006. now working as software engineer.Choi Saab wrote:Can you tell a bit more about your EU partner ? You don't have to have a PR to apply if your partner has got British nationality
gcameo wrote:She is an EEA national. registered for WRS in september 2007. Worked till november 2007. Maternity leave till sept 2009. Working in sainsbury's since sept 2009 till present. currently on maternity leave but still employee of sainsbury's. I have been in full time employment since 2006. now working as software engineer.Choi Saab wrote:Can you tell a bit more about your EU partner ? You don't have to have a PR to apply if your partner has got British nationality
hope this helps
I think that is long... I actually called HO again and this time made it clear my wife has automatic permanent residence.. and they said i can apply. i have to prove she has been exercising treaty rights for 6 years... which i think its the right answer.Choi Saab wrote:gcameo wrote:She is an EEA national. registered for WRS in september 2007. Worked till november 2007. Maternity leave till sept 2009. Working in sainsbury's since sept 2009 till present. currently on maternity leave but still employee of sainsbury's. I have been in full time employment since 2006. now working as software engineer.Choi Saab wrote:Can you tell a bit more about your EU partner ? You don't have to have a PR to apply if your partner has got British nationality
hope this helps
If she has documentary evidence to prove her continuity of exercising treaty rights from Sep'07 til Sep'12 then she automatically got the PR status since Sep'12 which now marks her one year since PR status. Now she can apply for British citizenship and once she is British, you can apply as a spouse of a British national which requires you to be resident for 3 years. (It can be any status doesn't have to be PR/ILR)
This is what I think. I can be wrong just double check with Gurus
Thank you for sharing your experience and the advice. In the end we have also decided we will avoid this "being too smart" approach and go with what everybody does even if it takes longer. Risking £875 only to be refused on some technical rubbish is not worth it.IyaCiara wrote:I think that you should proceed cautiously with this matter because, as previously pointed out, applying for proof of permanent residence via the EEA4 form is a lot more cost effective than applying for naturalisation and then being refused on a technicality.
The information provided in the Aire Centre link above is very useful and informative. However, Home Office tend not to take such a liberal and practical approach to applying the European immigration rules.
I have been a permanent resident since 2003 so in theory my husband (non EEA national) should have acquired residence automatically when he married me - in practice we still had to apply for a residence card through EEA2.
After 5 years of marriage in 2012 we applied for confirmation of his permanent residence status through form EEA4 and relied on the fact that I was already a permanent resident instead of proving that I had exercised treaty rights - the result of this is that my husband waited 13 months for his permanent residence and was refused twice before it was finally issued - after I had submitted proof of exercising treaty rights in the preceding five years.
I guess that what I'm really trying to say here is that if you have £800+ available then go ahead and apply for naturalization directly but don't be surprised if you are refused. On the other hand, if money is tight, then spend £55 on applying for confirmation of your right to PR first.
I am pretty sure the highlighted quote is NOT right. Residence requirement for the spouse of the British citizen is not specific about how you entered or were initially resident in the UK.isabelilla wrote:So he put me on hold while he made enquiries and then he confirmed that I actually acquired Permanent Residence Status in Sept 2012 and that I can now apply for naturalisation as a British Citizen as exactly 6 years have elapsed.
But he said that I cannot apply for naturalisation as BC as the "spouse of a British Citizen" even though my spouse is now British but still as "the spouse of an EEA national" and this is because I entered the UK with a Family permit under European Law and not under British Law.
Does this make sense? is the adviser right? I have my doubts about it. Can anyone plz help me because this is stressing me so much. He also mentioned that the fact that My Residence Card expired last month will not affect me at all when I apply for Naturalisation as BC and that I should enclose a cover letter explaining my circumstances together with my AN application..
Correct (assuming your husband exercising treaty rights which he must have as he gained PR and BC).isabelilla wrote:Jambo thanx 4 ur answer. I arrived in uk on 15th Sept 2007 so I became a Permanent Residence on 15th Sept 2012. On 15th Sept 2013 I have been here 6 years so I have met the 6 year residence requirement to apply for BC under EU law.
Correct. Not 6 years but 5 years. You first need to show you have PR (as PR is a requirement for BC).1. "Spouse of EEA national - providing your husband Polish passport + PR card. You will need to provide evidence you have lived in the UK for 5 years"
So in the AN form I should provide my husband's Polish passport and PR card and supporting documents confirming my lawful stay in UK for 6 years such as bank statements, HM revenue tax calculations for every year, etc ?
Either British passport or naturalisation certificate and your marriage certificate to show you are married to British citizen.2. "Spouse of a British national - providing your husband naturalisation certificate / British passport allowing you to apply for naturalisation once you have PR, and 3 years of residence"
So in the AN form do I have to also enclose my husband's British Passport n naturalisation certificate?
Both - write "British & Polish".So do I apply as the spouse of an EEA national or British Citizen? I am asking this because:
on page 6, Q 1.43 of the AN form it says "Partner's nationality" so do I write British or Polish or both?
5 years.also on page 7, Q 2.2 "details of all absences from UK during the last 5 yrs, if married to a BC the last 3 years. So do I go for the 5 or 3 yrs?
also on page 8, Q 2.4 "EEA nationals exercising EC Treaty rights" do I have to fill in all that section?
The case is not complicated. Just need to be done in two stages. As long as you example the basis of your application on page 13, I don't see any reason for the caseworker not understanding your case.isabelilla wrote:Guru
Thnx 4 ur answer so the HO adviser was probably wrong, wasn't he? I forgot to mention in my other post that he also said I should put in Q. 1.43, page 6 about partner's nationality as British and not Polish but applied as a spouse of EEA national, that is why it does not make sense to me.
So do I apply as spouse of British or spouse of EEA national? Please advice me. I know my case is very complicated. Thanks in advance.