2014hopeful
Registered Users (C)
Hello all,
Just hoping to get a few words of advice about my eligibility for the 2014 DV. I'm from Australia and won the lottery this year. My number is 2014OC000007XX so I'm hopeful of an interview sometime next March or thereabouts.
My question relates to my eligibility based on country of birth. In short, I was born in England, which is ineligible for the DV lottery. My father had been doing some postgrad study there and my mother was along for the ride, when I was unexpectedly conceived. I was born shortly after my father finished his studies and within six months, we had returned to Australia. Since my parents were in the UK temporarily, I understand that I should still be eligible for the DV under my Australian nationality as "an alien born in a foreign state in which neither parent was born or had residence at the alien's time of birth". Is that correct? My parents were both born in Australia and were not actually residing in the UK (although the distinction between study and residence may be a fine one).
Now here's where it gets a bit complex. We returned to the UK when I was 6 and I then spent most of my life until my mid-twenties moving back and forth between the UK and Australia. Along the way, I picked up a UK high school education, UK undergrad and UK master's degrees, as well as UK citizenship. I left the UK in 2004 and have been back in Oz since 2006. I also have a couple of Australian postgrad qualifications (clearly I won't struggle with the educational requirement!), however all the interviewer will have to rely on regarding my early years is my word. I have no proof that my parents were only in the UK temporarily, nor that we moved back to Australia straight after I was born. I'm guessing my high school and further studies in the UK might make it look like I lived there permanently until I was an adult (which I didn't).
My question is this: will it be sufficient for me simply to explain the situation to the interviewer or will they need further proof that my parents were only in the UK temporarily? If so, is a statutory declaration by my father likely to suffice? Secondly, I read somewhere that to be counted as an Australian for chargeability purposes, it would be sufficient to establish that my parents were in the UK temporarily. Given that they were only there because of my father's studies and we moved back following my birth, I assume this would count as a temporary stay in the UK. Is that correct?
Thoughts gratefully appreciated! Many thanks in advance.
Just hoping to get a few words of advice about my eligibility for the 2014 DV. I'm from Australia and won the lottery this year. My number is 2014OC000007XX so I'm hopeful of an interview sometime next March or thereabouts.
My question relates to my eligibility based on country of birth. In short, I was born in England, which is ineligible for the DV lottery. My father had been doing some postgrad study there and my mother was along for the ride, when I was unexpectedly conceived. I was born shortly after my father finished his studies and within six months, we had returned to Australia. Since my parents were in the UK temporarily, I understand that I should still be eligible for the DV under my Australian nationality as "an alien born in a foreign state in which neither parent was born or had residence at the alien's time of birth". Is that correct? My parents were both born in Australia and were not actually residing in the UK (although the distinction between study and residence may be a fine one).
Now here's where it gets a bit complex. We returned to the UK when I was 6 and I then spent most of my life until my mid-twenties moving back and forth between the UK and Australia. Along the way, I picked up a UK high school education, UK undergrad and UK master's degrees, as well as UK citizenship. I left the UK in 2004 and have been back in Oz since 2006. I also have a couple of Australian postgrad qualifications (clearly I won't struggle with the educational requirement!), however all the interviewer will have to rely on regarding my early years is my word. I have no proof that my parents were only in the UK temporarily, nor that we moved back to Australia straight after I was born. I'm guessing my high school and further studies in the UK might make it look like I lived there permanently until I was an adult (which I didn't).
My question is this: will it be sufficient for me simply to explain the situation to the interviewer or will they need further proof that my parents were only in the UK temporarily? If so, is a statutory declaration by my father likely to suffice? Secondly, I read somewhere that to be counted as an Australian for chargeability purposes, it would be sufficient to establish that my parents were in the UK temporarily. Given that they were only there because of my father's studies and we moved back following my birth, I assume this would count as a temporary stay in the UK. Is that correct?
Thoughts gratefully appreciated! Many thanks in advance.