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17 answers

The baby comes from the country that the plane is owned by (the company) or, the country that the plane took off from. It's really the parent's choice. I'm p/o because my parents could've said i was born in Ireland.

2007-04-30 13:06:46 · answer #1 · answered by Jayce G 1 · 0 0

The correct answer for this is the baby's place of birth would be the nationality of the air carrier, eg. if the baby is born on a British Airways plane then the "place of birth" would be the United Kingdom etc. The nationality of the baby would be the mother's nationality according to English Law as after the birth a birth certificate would have to be issued. If born in on a UK plane then the birth certificate would state born in the UK, the nationality of the child would not be British but that of his mother. The nationality of the baby would be determined by the law of the country on the plane in which he or she was born! The child would not take the "nationality" of the plane in which he or she was born. Some countries I believe give the father's nationality to the child. Hope this answers your question! :)

2007-04-23 07:40:13 · answer #2 · answered by Kate T 1 · 1 3

It depends on the nationality of the parents, not where the baby is born. If an American couple were on holiday in Russia, and their baby was born there, it would still be American, not Russian.
So if an English couple have a baby in a plane over India, the baby is not Indian, it is English.

2007-04-23 07:32:11 · answer #3 · answered by louloubelle 4 · 0 3

The u . s . a . of foundation would be based on the dad and mom' nationality frequently yet secondarily on the country of the airship's 'flag' everywhere the airplane is predicated ie KAL would make the youngster Korean, Qantas: Australian, American airlines: u . s . etc. This rule originates/applies to ocean going vessels (cruise ships etc.) and additionally should stay with interior the air.

2016-11-26 23:05:02 · answer #4 · answered by holness 4 · 0 0

it's easy,,,
1. going to check the G.P.S. and you can find your location, and where could be the baby's native place.
2. the air plane is belong to which country, also the baby is same, because of the teritory
3. the baby is belong to his mother and father's country
4. the baby also can take united nations passport.
5. the baby has right to have all country's passport all over the world.
6. the baby maybe is a angel, so he/she don't need a passport or belong to any country.
7. ask for God.

2007-04-23 07:42:11 · answer #5 · answered by Calvary 2 · 0 3

Whereever the baby was concieved

I think

yeah ill go with that

<3 LOL

2007-04-29 09:36:58 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

doesn't matter where the plane is. the baby is from whatever airline where the plane is from that the baby was born in. I know a guy who is from/is american airline. good guy. they sort of talk different. and when we go on trips he always comes up with excuses to cause us to delay our trip.

2007-04-23 07:43:53 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

Legally I think whereever the plane lands is considered the birthplace.

2007-04-23 07:41:59 · answer #8 · answered by John L 5 · 0 3

thats a good question, probably the country the baby lands in since the mother has to be taken to the hospital

2007-04-23 07:31:27 · answer #9 · answered by Jahpson 5 · 0 4

depends on who the parents are. i was born in america but im afrikan.

2007-04-27 12:00:22 · answer #10 · answered by Raven 1 · 0 0

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