No British citizenship for man who allowed Pakistani nationality to lapse
Section 4B of the British Nationality Act 1981 entitles people with certain British nationality statuses to register as British citizens if they:
- do not have any other citizenship or nationality, and
- have not, since 19 March 2009, “renounced, voluntarily relinquished or lost through action or inaction any citizenship or nationality”.
The statuses mentioned in section 4B include British Overseas Citizens — many of whom have been embroiled in lengthy legal battles — as well as British National (Overseas) or BNO citizens.
One of those trying to invoke this provision was Hashim Tariq, who was born in Pakistan but also had BNO status. His citizenship saga began in 2010 with an unsuccessful application under section 4B. Eleven years on, the Home Office has prevailed: Secretary of State for the Home Department v Tariq [2021] EWCA Civ 378.
The case turned on whether Mr Tariq could establish that he had not lost his Pakistani citizenship through inaction. A letter from the Pakistani consulate in Hong Kong stated that Mr Tariq ceased to be a Pakistani national when he acquired BNO status in 1997. Expert evidence, however, found that the letter was mistaken; Mr Tariq only lost his Pakistani citizenship when he turned 21, on 2 January 2010 (crucially, after the section 4B relevant date of 19 March 2009). Because Mr Tariq lost his Pakistani citizenship through inaction (his failure to renounce his BNO status by age 21), he failed to meet the section 4B criteria.
Thankfully for Mr Tariq, the new Hong Kong BNO visa route now offers him a route to settlement in the UK instead.
Posted on 30.03.2021.
We provide services
Other useful articles
- Bank of England cuts interest rates to 4.75%
- Lack of appeal against rejection of late EUSS applications does not breach Withdrawal Agreement
- Autumn Budget 2024: VAT Fees Impact Private Schools in the UK
- The Autumn Budget 2024: A Balancing Act for British Businesses
- Abolishing the Non-Dom Regime: A New Era for UK Taxation
- Care home operator’s sponsor licence revoked for supplying sponsored workers to third parties
Get specialist advice
Please contact with one of our immigration lawyers by phone +44 (0) 207 907 1460 (London), +971 509 265 140, +971 525 977 456 (Dubai) or complete our enquiry
Contact us