Children of BPP

The request was successful.

Dear Home Office,
what are the rights of children for a live or dead BPP (BPP on the date of their birth), if they are (the children) a legal stateless residents of the UK...?

Yours faithfully,

Eyad Sag

FOI Requests, Home Office

Please be aware that we have decided to handle your correspondence of 29 August 2018 outside the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act. This is because it does not meet the criteria for a Freedom of Information request, as it does not ask for recorded information.

Below is a link to the ICO guidance for the criteria for valid requests under the Act:
https://ico.org.uk/media/for-organisatio...

We will provide an answer to your query, but it will be answer outside of the provisions of the Act. You should expect to receive a response in due course.

FOI Requests

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Digital Correspondence Allocation Team, Home Office

Dear Sir / Madam,

 

 

Thank you for your email of 29 August.

 

Please be informed that from the information contained in your e-mail
below, we are unable to ascertain the exact nature of your enquiry or your
immigration status.

Please refer to our website for guidance by using this link:
[1]https://www.gov.uk/

 

You may also find the following specific links useful:

 

Visa and Immigration: [2]https://www.gov.uk/browse/visas-immigrat... and

 

[3]https://www.gov.uk/contact-ukvi/overview

 

We are unable to assist you further.

 

 

In accordance with the new data regulations we have updated our Privacy
Information Notice and you can find out more by going to:

 

[4]https://www.gov.uk/government/publicatio...

Or: 
[5]https://www.gov.uk/government/organisati...

 

 

Yours faithfully,

 

UK Visas and Immigration

 

 

 

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Dear Digital Correspondence Allocation Team,

I need to know what rights are included in the British citizenship law related to the BPP's children if they left with no nationality(stateless) till today.

Yours sincerely,

Eyad Sag

Further Nationality Enquiries, Home Office

Dear Sir/Madam

Thank you for your email correspondence.

We have noted that the email address you have provided to us for reply is from a company website/shared mail address. If we use the email address you have provided our reply will be made available within the public domain. Alternatively, you can provide us with a private mail address for a reply direct to you only. Please notify us within 5 working days of your preference.

Kind regards

CCT Team - Liverpool

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Dear Further Nationality Enquiries,

Please reply to my email address supplied with this enquiry as this is my private email and it is fine with me.
really appreciate your precious time on this occasion .

Yours sincerely,

Eyad Sag

Further Nationality Enquiries, Home Office

Thank you for your email to the Further Nationality Enquiries mailbox.
Our service standard for responding to your email is 20 working days.

Every effort will be made to deal with your enquiry within this timescale
and we respectfully request that you do not chase your enquiry within this
time.
Please be advised that if you are seeking progress of your application for
naturalisation and it has been with the Home Office for less than the
published service standard of 6 months we will be unable to provide you
with any further information or give you an update of your application.

If we require further information from you the case-working team will
contact you directly.

International Enquires – Any queries relating to making an application
outside of the UK are not handled by this mailbox and so you will not
receive a response.
For questions about coming to the UK or about an application that is not
related to British nationality that you have already submitted outside of
the UK please use
[1]https://www.gov.uk/contact-ukvi-inside-o...
where you will find the relevant contact details for contacting the
international enquiry team.

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References

Visible links
1. https://www.gov.uk/contact-ukvi-inside-o...

Further Nationality Enquiries, Home Office

Dear Sir/Madam

Please note that you need to send us your original enquiry.

Kind regards
A04
CCT Team - Liverpool

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Dear Further Nationality Enquiries,

Dear Home Office,
what are the rights of children for a live or dead BPP (BPP on the date of their birth), if they are (the children) a legal stateless residents of the UK...?
Yours faithfully,
Eyad Sag

Yours sincerely,

Eyad Sag

Further Nationality Enquiries, Home Office

Thank you for your email to the Further Nationality Enquiries mailbox.
Our service standard for responding to your email is 20 working days.

Every effort will be made to deal with your enquiry within this timescale
and we respectfully request that you do not chase your enquiry within this
time.
Please be advised that if you are seeking progress of your application for
naturalisation and it has been with the Home Office for less than the
published service standard of 6 months we will be unable to provide you
with any further information or give you an update of your application.

If we require further information from you the case-working team will
contact you directly.

International Enquires – Any queries relating to making an application
outside of the UK are not handled by this mailbox and so you will not
receive a response.
For questions about coming to the UK or about an application that is not
related to British nationality that you have already submitted outside of
the UK please use
[1]https://www.gov.uk/contact-ukvi-inside-o...
where you will find the relevant contact details for contacting the
international enquiry team.

show quoted sections

References

Visible links
1. https://www.gov.uk/contact-ukvi-inside-o...

Further Nationality Enquiries, Home Office

Dear Sir/Madam

Thank you for your email.

As a British protected person
A person would have become a British protected person under the British Nationality Act 1981 on 1 January 1983 if you:

•were a citizen or national of Brunei
•were already a British protected person •would otherwise have been born stateless (without a country) in the UK or an overseas territory because, when you were born, one of your parents was a British protected person In most cases you would have lost your British protected person status if:

•you gained any other nationality or citizenship •the territory you were connected with became independent and you became a citizen of that country Rights as a British protected person

A person can:

•hold a British passport
•get consular assistance and protection from UK diplomatic posts

However, a BPP:

• is subject to immigration controls and don’t have the automatic right to live or work in the UK • is not considered a UK national by the European Union (EU) Become a British protected person

A person may be able to register as a British protected person only if all the following apply:

• they are stateless and always have been • they were born in the UK or an overseas territory • their father or mother was a British protected person when you were born

From the very limited information below they may be able to register as a BPP if they can evidence their parent was a BPP when they were born

Kind regards
A04
CCT Team - Liverpool

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