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 Can I travel to UK and Europe with an American greed card?
Hi Im a Yemeni national holding a US lawful permanent residence card
holder and my question was can I travel to Uk for a visit (FROM YEMEN) with my card??..If no what do I need to do and is it ...


 My children have Dual UK/US Nationality. If we travel to the US do their US passports have to be current?
Its a major pain getting them renewed $80 each plus time off work for BOTH parents and round trip travel to London. Can we just take the expired passports with us and travel on their valid British ...


 What would YOU do if someone dissed you out??????????????????????...
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 I want to know the postcode of usa?
...


 If you broke the law in another country's embassy, then would be be subject to that country's laws?
Even if you were a citizen of the country that the embassy stands on and not the country the embassy represents? Also what if you did something in an embassy that is illegal in your country but not ...


 I am a Canadian resident, do I need a vis to enter America ?
I have a Canadian residency and would like to visit the US for few days , do I need a vis to there ?...


 Would stand by and watch terrorists launch missles from your neighbors back yard and not do anything about it?
The people of Lebanon do....


 American embassy in my country ??
am having troubles with my strict relegouis muslim family ... i don't want to say all details ... i just wanna know if American embassy can help me with having my freedom and leaving my family ...


 My son is 11 years old should i sign his passport?
...


 Can anybody check if, now that Romania will enter UE, people from Romania can go to UK without a visa?
But I need to know for sure cause a friend of mine from Romania is desperate to know....


 Why do men want to marry poor women from other poor countries?
There are lots of questions here about bringing women from the phillipeens to their countries.

I guess I find it insulting because I was raised by one of these women....


 Question about passports?
I am from the U.S. and now living in Thailand.Now,after many trips around the world I have no pages left in my passport to stamp.Do I have to get a completely new passport from the U.S. embassy or do ...


 Why is the UK Emmigration Minister Mr Woolas calling for a ban on further migrants coming to Britain?
So he should.....Too Little Too Late in my books.....


 Bringing a woman from the philippines to the usa.?
how hard is it to prove financial hardship if i want to bring a woman from the philippines to the usa to marry without us ever meeting in person in the last two years?...


 Is Obama a US Citizen?
http://wikileaks.org/lea
Read. I guess there was a conspiracy in 1961 to publish his birth announcement in the Honolulu paper ...


 How can i contact Fidel Castro of Cuba. I want to write him a letter...anyone knows his address?
His office, home address???...


 Which country do you like most in Africa?
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 What is better: A world without borders, or a passport filled with stamps?
...


 I heard there is a 3 month back-log to get a passport?
Can anyone tell me if this is true. And even if you expedite it, it would still take 3 months....


 How do I get a passport in my married name when I'm not married yet?
My fiance's parents booked our honeymoon under my married name but I woun't have any ID with my married name on it. Can I get a passport with my married name on it?...



alein689
If a person who is not an American citizen gives birth to a child at the US embassy is their child a Citizen?
For instance: a person from Mexico gives birth to a child while on the grounds of the US embassy, since those grounds are considered US soil would that child be a US citizen?



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ii337
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No.
Citizenship is based on the natonality of the parent not where the child was born. Other wise I am sure pregnant women would be dropping on purpose to get into a country.

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happy go lucky tonight
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dognhorsemom, i think you should read the information before you give out the wrong opinion. legally according to the text anybody born on U.S. Territory or Land (which includes U.S. Embassy's) is considered a U.S. CITIZEN. so my answer is yes.

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daddysboicub
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it doesnt even have to be at the embassy, it can be on a city buss. as long as the birth takes place in the united states or on any of its properties, it is a legal u.s. citizen.

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nicnoo23
they should be

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laydlo
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Actually the child's birth place determines theur residency, not the parent's nationality or citizenship. Many women actually do come to the U.S. and make sure they have their children in the U.S. so that the child is considered a citizen. Now, back to the question. If it takes place on the embassy grounds the child is a U.S. citizen. That's why when a U.S. citizen commits a crime overseas and runs to the embassy they are protected from the law of that land unless the ambassador turns them mover since the embassy falls under the laws and guidelines of the U.S.

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saahil
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well ideally speaking it is correct , but why would a US embassy authority allow a pregnant woman in labour enter the premises?

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norman7774
ABSOLUTELY.. Remember.. the building of the American Embssy and the ground that it sits on.. regardless of where it is located.. in China.. Russia... Lisbon(Portugal), that is American property and if a person as you mentioned.. gives birth IN that building, it is ON American soil and yes(unfortunately) they will have a child that will be American

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Bambi slayer
30 years ago yes, now, no. To many people were doing that to get a ticket here.

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Azara
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Yep, right of land; any child becames a citizen as long as he had been born in a US property.

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Curious1usa
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I advise you to listen to Dognhorsemom. There are certain protections provided to countries at their foreign missions (embassies, consulates and diplomatic offices), but national sovereignty abroad does not extend to the point of giving US citizenship to anyone born at a US diplomatic post - jus soli does not apply.

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Dewhitewolf
I would have to agree with that consular officer's answer. While the US Embassy is considered US property (I don't know if it's the same for Consulates, as they serve a different purpose), but there may be a written exemption, in either US or international law, about whether births occuring there affect citizenship.

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dognhorsemom
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Sorry for all the wrong answers. Where do people get this stuff?

There are six basic sources of citizenship worldwide: by place of birth, by descent, by marriage, by naturalization, by treaty and by default. Every country in the world makes their own laws about acquisition of citizenship using some of or a combination of these six principals.

US citizenship law uses place of birth, descent, naturalization and default. This means, for the birth of babies, that a child born in the US (or in US territorial waters, or in a plane flying overhead) acquires citizenship by place of birth. Outside the US - such as on military bases, on the grounds of US embassies, or anywhere else - US citizenship can only be acquired by descent: one or both of the parents is a US citizen who lived in the US long enough to pass on citizenship to the child.

US embassies are NOT US soil for the purpose of citizenship, or anything else. They are owned or rented properties with special rights due to diplomatic treaties and certain international conventions, but those rights do not include the right to claim as a US citizen any child born on the grounds. US military bases are the same. Contrary to popular perception and a lot of careless news reporting, embassies are still the sovereign territory of the country in which they are located, not of the country whose diplomatic mission is housed there. That is why an office building can host an embassy on some floors and, say, a bank on others.

The reason for the perception is that the Vienna Convention states that the local government foreswears the right to enter an embassy, and diplomatic immunity protects the diplomats working inside. However, this does not mean that that space is somehow transmuted into US (or other) soil or legal territory for purposes of citizenship.

Say, for example, that a baby is born in the U.S. Embassy to Ickystan. That child does not gain U.S. citizenship by virtue of birth in the U.S.- it was born in Ickystan.

Some myths die hard. Jose, whose answer follows this, is also wrong. This is not my opinion; it is the law. For those who still would rather think that I am wrong, show me an official reference.

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