British protected persons have a rare form of nationality that arises from them living within the territory that is or was once controlled by the British state. This form of nationality is rare and can be confusing.
As of 2020, there were 1,200 British protected persons subject to unique requirements and rights.
If you are a British protected person, you are effectively stateless, living in a territory controlled or once controlled by the British Empire. This means that you will be a national that possesses a British passport, but you will not have direct access to British citizenship. The UK government lists three key reasons that someone will have this status. These included that you met the following requirements on 1st January 1983:
When the British Empire was expanding, it swallowed up countless territories. However, it wanted to incorporate only some of them into a territory formally controlled by the Empire. Instead, it decided they would be classed as foreign land under British protection.
The people inside of these territories were technically residing in a foreign land. Therefore, they were not British citizens. However, they were also not living within independent countries.
The British Empire had made thousands of people stateless and created the protected persons status so that they would have some kind of nationality.
British Protected Person status, as it exists currently, was formulated in 1981 under the British Nationality Act.
The main right afforded to protected persons is that they have held a British passport and the majority of the privileges that brings. This includes the following:
However, people with this status will still be missing out on a range of different rights. They will have no automatic right to live and work in the UK and will not be considered UK nationals when travelling in the European Union. This means that you will have to get a standard visa to visit the EU for any length of time and will not be eligible for ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System). Other restrictions include the following:
Because of these restrictions experienced by all people that are British protected persons, many choose to obtain British Citizenship. Additional rights you will experience as a British citizen include:
Although protected persons are not automatically citizens, they will still find it easier to gain citizenship status. They will not have to undergo the usual naturalisation process. Instead, they can become British citizens by registration. This requires five years of residing in the UK, at least one year of which must be while possessing indefinite leave to remain.
The British Empire was an enormous institution occupying vast swathes of the world. Therefore, there are many different origins for British protected persons. These are different for protection by birth and protection by descent.
Protection by birth refers to being eligible for protected person status because of where you were born. Common circumstances of eligibility because of birth include the following:
Protection by descent is a much more complicated matter. It requires key circumstances around your birth and your father’s birth to line up in a specific way.
The only common reason for protection by descent applies to people in Kenya. This occurs if your father was born in the Kenya Protectorate between 1920 and December 1963 and you were also born in the Kenya Protectorate.
If you believe you fit one of these requirements, you will not have an automatic right to British protected person status. You must contact UK Visas and Immigration to apply to register for this unique status.
After you contact UK Visas and Immigration, HM Passport Office will get in touch. They will send you a letter asking for the documentation and information they will need to process your application. This may include any or all of the following:
The HM Passport Office has the right to ask for any further documentation they require on top of this. If you cannot provide any documentation they ask for, you will need to explain why and provide evidence.
If the government can confirm that you fit all of the requirements for protected person status, you will receive your protected person’s passport.
Like all passports, a protected person’s passport will eventually expire after several years. To maintain the right to travel, you must request to renew it with the HM Passport Office. This will also be the case if your passport is lost or stolen.
This is a simple process if you could submit all required documentation on your initial application. They will not need to see them again, and you should receive your new passport within a few months.
The process will be more complicated if you achieve protected persons status despite not having all the required documentation. In this case, you will be asked to send the documentation again, and you must re-justify why you cannot provide them.
At WMYV, we can help you to understand if you are eligible for BPP status and can help you with the complex application procedure. Once your application is submitted, we liaise with the UK government to track its progress and keep you updated about when you can expect to learn the result of your application.
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The number of protected persons is starting to dwindle as many people lose this status. If you fit either of the three reasons defined by the government, you will lose your status. These are the following:
If you lose your protected persons status, you will not be able to hold a British passport and will lose all the associated rights.
In order to gain a protected person’s order, you will need to be born, or a descendant of a British protectorate or British protected states.
The British protected states are as follows:
Bahrain | Brunei | Kuwait |
Malay States | Maldives | North Borneo and Labuan |
North Borneo and Labuan | Qatar | Sarawak |
Swaziland | Tonga | United Arab Emirates. |
There are even more British protectorates. They include:
Aden Protectorates | Akrotiri and Dhekelia | Ashanti |
Barotseland | Bechuanaland | Bunyoro |
Cyprus Egypt Gambia Protectorate | Gilbert Islands | Ionian Islands |
Kamaran | Kenya Protectorates | Malawi |
Maldives | Nigeria Protectorates | North East & North West Rhodesia |
Northern Somaliland | Northern Territories Protectorate | Nyasaland |
Sierra Leone Protectorate | Solomon Islands | Swaziland |
Transvaal | Tuvalu | Uganda |
Zambia | Zanzibar |
Remember that many of these protected states and protectorates are now part of modern-day nations such as Malaysia, Nigeria, and Cyprus. Furthermore, many of them go by their old colonial name rather than the name that they go by now. Make sure to research your local history if your nation has been under colonial rule to find out if you are living in what used to be a protected state or protectorate.
Yes, even though these statuses have very similar names, they refer to entirely different things.
As stated earlier, a British protected person is somebody who would be stateless but has applied to be classed as a British national with partial rights under a British passport.
Meanwhile, someone under the UK Protected Persons Service (UKPPS) is a body associated with the police service to protect people at risk from serious crime. This includes witnesses to the crime, potential victims of honour-based violence, and people that continue to help the police in their investigations of serious crimes.
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