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I'm pregnant with my Polish boyfriend. Visa question.


posts: 24
 
wanrawin
  Feb 13, 08, 08:52  #1

im having student visa and now 4 months pregnant.my boyfriend is polish.my visa will finish in august.it wasnt plan but we decided to keep baby.if my baby is born what type of visa he will have.my boyfriend said the baby will have polish passport. will i get separated from my baby as my boyfriend dont wanna married yet?
pls help

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Ranj
  Feb 13, 08, 08:57  #2

My guess is you apply for a different visa......you should probably check with your embassy, as it would have the most accurate info on what you should do.


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wanrawin
  Feb 13, 08, 09:06  #3

ok thank you. thats help me lots. as i got no one to talk with at all...my family just want me to get rid of the baby.but i will see what i could do for my little one
thank you again

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Bea
  Feb 14, 08, 17:32  #4

If your baby will be born in UK, he/she will be a British Citizen automatically and a British Passport. You will gain rights to remain and your boyfriend is an EU Citizen, so I don't think there is a problem.

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isthatu
  Feb 14, 08, 19:12  #5

lol,no frikkin wonder NHS maternity wards are being swamped if this is the percieved case..........


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plk123
  Feb 14, 08, 19:30  #6

good for you for deciding to keep the baby. :)


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jestesjedyny
  Feb 14, 08, 19:53  #7

Babies are beautiful and they didn't ask to come to this world.. meaning you made the right choice :D But why he doesn't want to marry you?


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Posts: 189
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Dice
Edited by: Dice  Feb 14, 08, 20:03  #8

You made a right choice, Wanrawin. Trust me, once you have the baby in your arms - there is no higher high in this world. One second with your baby is worth 1000 times the hardship you'll have to go through to get there. Congratulations.


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ShelleyS
  Feb 15, 08, 06:12  #9

Bea wrote:
If your baby will be born in UK, he/she will be a British Citizen automatically and a British Passport. You will gain rights to remain and your boyfriend is an EU Citizen, so I don't think there is a problem.


Wrong!!!! The baby has the same status as the parents...so if she is on a visa when the visa is all gone, she is gone with it along with the baby....

Good luck


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indianpole
Edited by: indianpole  Feb 15, 08, 09:28  #10

hi there,
i was told that my child WILL NOT get Brtish citizenship although he/she will be getting a british birth certificate and after 5 years if the child is still living in the U.K she/he can apply then. Right now we will be appling for a Polish passport from the consul in edinburgh as my husband is Polish. I think things are abit simpler 'paper wise' if you are married.

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Harry
  Feb 15, 08, 10:06  #11

indianpole wrote:
i was told that my child WILL NOT get Brtish citizenship although he/she will be getting a british birth certificate and after 5 years if the child is still living in the U.K she/he can apply then. Right now we will be appling for a Polish passport from the consul in edinburgh as my husband is Polish.


That is correct. Being born in the UK does not entitle a child to a British passport. My cousin's baby was born in UK but does not have a British passport (both parents are Polish) and will not be getting one because the family have now moved back to Poland.

However, any child who has one Polish parent automatically receives Polish citizenship. If one of the parents a citizen of another state, the parents may renounce the child's Polish citizenship but must do so within three months of birth and the child may rfe-acquire Polish citizenship if he/she so chooses. If one parent is Polish and the other is unknown or of unknown or undefined citizenship or does not possess any citizenship, the parents can not renounce the child's Polish citizenship.

As the mother of a Polish citizen (i.e. an EU citizen), you can apply for an EEA Family Permit visa to live in any EU member state other than Poland or for a Polish residence permit to live in Poland. You should be automatically entitled to either of these visas (depending on where you want to live).

Hope this helps and good luck.

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wanrawin
  Feb 15, 08, 10:11  #12

thank you for all the answer..

so in this case the baby status will belong to mother or father...could he has polish citizen as his dad?cos that would be better for him to stay in here

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ShelleyS
  Feb 15, 08, 10:15  #13

indianpole wrote:
i was told that my child WILL NOT get Brtish citizenship


Why should she? being born in a country does not entitle you to a passport...

indianpole wrote:
he/she will be getting a british birth certificate and after 5 years


Why neither of you are British? Go get an Indian one or a Tibetan one or a Polish one!

Harry wrote:
However, any child who has one Polish parent automatically receives Polish citizenship.


There you go, simple!


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plk123
  Feb 15, 08, 10:50  #14

ShelleyS wrote:
Why should she? being born in a country does not entitle you to a passport...
not in the UK perhaps.. it does in the US as of right now. that may change someday as the way things are, it only contributes to the immigration issues that are present in america.


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ShelleyS
  Feb 15, 08, 10:53  #15

plk123 wrote:
not in the UK perhaps


Some think that too, not that it makes any difference people just stay here regardless

Anyway 7 minutes and Im going home...


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Harry
  Feb 15, 08, 10:56  #16

ShelleyS wrote:
Why should she? being born in a country does not entitle you to a passport...


Well that would very much depend on whether the country applies jus soli or jus sanguinis, doesn't it?

The UK of course used to apply the jus soli principle but now it follows the jus sanguinis principle so that the country can run away from its commitment to the commonwealth.

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indianpole
  Feb 15, 08, 14:52  #17

[[
ShelleyS wrote:
Why should she? being born in a country does not entitle you to a passport...

Well duh thats what i was just trying to tell the lady who asked the question.
quote=ShelleyS] Why neither of you are British? Go get an Indian one or a Tibetan one or a Polish one! [/quote]
My child will be born here and thts why she/he will get a british Birth certificate quote=ShelleyS]
There you go, simple! [/quote]
Well, I just stated that i will be applying for a polish passort for my child when he/she will be born NOT A BRITISH ONE

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RockyMason
  Feb 17, 08, 02:05  #18

According to u its not credible. Crediblity is a combination of facts and opinion. My professor's opinion is that I am very credible. =) okay so i make a woopsie with the polish remark. The fact still is she got accidentally knocked up and her BF doesn't want to marry her. So y not terminate it and save them both the misery? Her english is terrible it me to believe she was polish! =)

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Grzegorz_
  Feb 17, 08, 03:46  #19

ShelleyS wrote:


Why should she? being born in a country does not entitle you to a passport...


But the child doesn't really need that...

RockyMason wrote:


You aren't very brainny, are you... ?


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wanrawin
  Feb 17, 08, 06:16  #20

RockyMason wrote:
The fact still is she got accidentally knocked up and her BF doesn't want to marry her. So y not terminate it and save them both the misery? Her english is terrible it me to believe she was polish! =)


thanks for putting some comments here so i can see the other points of vision.
actually im not polish.im half thai half arabic. we dont want to get married yet as we just been together for a year or maybe he get bored of seeing me everyday :) < we r living together >

And thank you very much for all the advices, we've decided to go for EEA family permit visa

thank you very much specially harry and indianpole

may god be upon u all

konrad+wanrawin+ mia< my baby's name :) >

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LondonChick
  Feb 18, 08, 14:33  #21

jestesjedyny wrote:
RockyMason wrote:
=) abort it i say!

Who did you sell your heart to? A demon?


Ignore the frat boy - apparently he's 19.... big man of the world and all that....


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Bea
  Feb 18, 08, 14:34  #22

I was in the same situation. So either I was extremely lucky, or I am just right

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plk123
  Feb 18, 08, 14:36  #23

he has no heart.


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Dzhaklin
  Feb 28, 08, 17:08  #24

Yea I don't think just because it's born in the Uk means it has citizenship. I know in Ireland if you have a kid there it doesn't get citizenship if the parent doesn't and I think they recently passed that law too.


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