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Babies of Polish couples born in England


posts: 25
 
starchild
Edited by: starchild  Jan 15, 08, 09:26  #1

Sorry in advance if there has already been a topic on this! I have searched but couldn't find anything...

I have been wondering if a Polish couple, who live in England permanently but have Polish passports, have a baby in England and they raise the baby here (lets say the baby never lives in Poland, just only in the UK) what Passport will the baby have?

Will the baby be a British citizen or Polish?

I have asked a few other people this and no-one I know is sure, so I hope its not a totally dumb question!

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telefonitika
  Jan 15, 08, 09:42  #2

starchild wrote:
British citizen or Polish?


i believe they are entitled to both as the baby has polish citizenship automatically as born to polish parents (so long as the polish parents dont surrend their polish citizenships) but you'd need to speak to embassy about this :D

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Wroclaw
  Jan 15, 08, 10:50  #3

starchild wrote:
Sorry in advance if there has already been a topic on this! I have searched but couldn't find anything...


This probably fits the rules for Naturalization... 6yrs

Google: british citizenship requirements... and see what comes up.

The baby would be able to travel on a Polish passport and still claim British nationality... up to a certain point... I think.

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Michal
  Jan 15, 08, 11:55  #4

I would imagine that if the baby was born here it would be registered and receive a British birth certificate. I would therefore imagine that the child could later apply for a British passport. Now that Poland is in the E.U there is little difference anyway. One big reason why I was always against British membership of the Common Market all those years ago.

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Seanus
  Jan 15, 08, 12:32  #5

Michal, just wondering, have u ever heard of Alan Bast*rd? The New Statesman, hehehe

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starchild
  Jan 15, 08, 14:38  #6

Thanks telefonitika and Wroclaw :-)

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noimmigration
Edited by: noimmigration  Jan 15, 08, 14:43  #7

just being born in britain does not qualify you for a british passport. the parents HAVE to be british citizens.

eww can you imagine an eastern european slav masqeurading is a brit

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miranda
  Jan 15, 08, 14:46  #8

noimmigration wrote:
eww can you imagine an eastern european slav masqeurading is a brit

and the other way around?

you are not planning your future working in imigration, are you?

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JustysiaS
  Jan 15, 08, 14:46  #9

noimmigration wrote:
just being born in britain does not qualify you for a british passport


err yes it does.

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Mister H
  Jan 15, 08, 14:47  #10

Seanus wrote:
Michal, just wondering, have u ever heard of Alan Bast*rd? The New Statesman, hehehe


For every Michal who posts on a forum like he does here, there are 100s who keep their views to themselves.

That might be more polite, but it doesn't mean that the silent majority aren't about to bust a blood vessel I'm afraid.

On the passport situation, do the Polish want their children to be born here and to have British passport ?

Does having pride in their country mean nothing ?

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JustysiaS
  Jan 15, 08, 14:50  #11

noimmigration wrote:
eww can you imagine an eastern european slav masqeurading is a brit


and you are a pathetic, illiterate idiot who masquerades as the voice of "real" Britain. there would be no Britain today if all Brits were as stupid and narrow minded as yourself.

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miranda
  Jan 15, 08, 14:50  #12

Mister H wrote:
Does having pride in their country mean nothing ?

no, British and Canadian passports are on eof the most seeked in the world still:), so don't feed us with the "pride" argument.

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JustysiaS
  Jan 15, 08, 14:53  #13

you can still have a Polish passport if at least one of your parents is a Polish citizen, can't you? you can have a double citizenship.

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Mister H
  Jan 15, 08, 14:53  #14

miranda wrote:
no, British and Canadian passports are on eof the most seeked in the world still:), so don't feed us with the "pride" argument.


So by that I take it that you mean that the average Polish parent can't wait to ditch their country and have their kids born here and brought up as British citizens with British passports ?

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miranda
  Jan 15, 08, 14:59  #15

Mister H wrote:
So by that I take it that you mean that the average Polish parent can't wait to ditch their country and have their kids born here and brought up as British citizens with British passports ?
You would have to ask the Polish parents, not me.
Besides, those babies would also have Polish citizenship.
I am not saying it is right or wrong, I am just statig the fact you are possibly trying to deny.

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osiol
  Jan 15, 08, 15:01  #16

Have pride in your country - keep lions.

Sorry! That should be:

Have a pride in your country - keep lions.

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inkrakow
  Jan 15, 08, 15:03  #17

They change the rules a while ago so being born in the UK doesn't automatically qualify you for a British passport. Now I understand that the baby takes on the mother's nationality.

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starchild
  Jan 15, 08, 15:09  #18

inkrakow wrote:
They change the rules a while ago so being born in the UK doesn't automatically qualify you for a British passport. Now I understand that the baby takes on the mother's nationality.


Aha... a post back on topic!

I was doubtful that being born here was enough, on its own, to get you a British passport, but I just wanted to know for sure. Not because it matters whether the baby in question has a British or a Polish passport, the parents aren't worried either way. I just wanted to know out of interest.



PS Nice to see you back on the forum JustysiaS telling the trolls where they can go! :-)

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isthatu
  Jan 15, 08, 15:14  #19

ITS A BABY, ANY LOWLIFE USING A BABY TO FURTHER AN ANTI IMIGRATION STANCE IS A TURD AND ,I HOPE STERILE.
Is the baby healthy,is mum happy,do mum and dad get enough sleep. Thats all that matters here...........

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starchild
  Jan 15, 08, 15:24  #20

Agreed.

The baby is perfection personified by the way!

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JustysiaS
  Jan 15, 08, 15:24  #21

starchild wrote:
PS Nice to see you back on the forum JustysiaS telling the trolls where they can go! :-)


it would be nice to see them go, actually ;). nice to see you too Starchild. i went away to Poland and Scotland for quite a long time, but now im back and ready to rumble ha ha

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Michal
  Jan 15, 08, 15:28  #22

JustysiaS wrote:
ain. there would be no Britain today if all

Sadly, there is no Britain today. And incidentely, in Poland they maintain their social cohesion through a strange mixture of the Roman Catholic Church and legislation which means that all foreigners in Poland are always reminded that they are simply 'guests'.

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isthatu
  Jan 15, 08, 15:36  #23

Michal wrote:
Sadly, there is no Britain today

HELP,THROW ME A LIFE BELT,I CANT SWIM !!!!!!!! where's "it" gone then? It was there last time I looked out the window!

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Michal
  Jan 15, 08, 15:47  #24

The island is here but has sadly changed since the 1960's.

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isthatu
  Jan 15, 08, 16:28  #25

Michal wrote:
changed since the 1960's.

I should hope so too,but atleast the mini skirt is still in fasion. All countries change,if they dont they become international laughing stocks as backward nations. Somethings Im sure were far better in the 1960s but taken as a whole I know which time Id rather be in.

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