My husband is Chinese and was born in Hong Kong. He holds a BNO and an HKSAR passport and has full right of abode in Hong Kong.
I?m English and hold a British passport and now, after living in HK for over seven years, hold a permanent HKID card.
My third child was born in England (it was during the summer holidays ? I didn?t think pregnancy and the summer heat went together and so escaped). Thus he has a British birth certificate and we got him a British passport at age 15 days so that he could travel to Hong Kong at 18 days.
He has a British passport, an HKSAR passport with an ID card that had no photo on it. And he also has a "hui xiang jing'. Applying the HKSAR passport was easy because everyone spoke English and the Hong Kong officials just follow the rules.
I found applying for the ?hui xiang jing?, however, very troublesome. Each person I spoke to told me a different story. In the end my husband took over and spoke Chinese to them. We found it was much better if I didn?t show my English face in the building and then no questions were asked about dual nationality.
It seems that China has policies about Chinese citizens who then choose to become nationals of other places, in that they don?t allow dual nationality. But I can?t be sure of this because no one would give me straight answers. And they don?t seem to have thought about children who get the dual nationalities by birth right.
My son has only one star on his HKID card at the moment and will get three when he is eighteen. These stars show that he is descended from Chinese. His ID card starts with the letter P, which I believe indicates that he was born overseas. These laws about nationality seem quite racist to me.
When I travel to China I use a three year multi entry visa. I find it is much easier and cheaper than applying for one at each visit.
The only time I travelled to China with my children and without my husband I took them on their British passports and applied for visas. When my husband travels with us he takes them through the Chinese side and I go through the "aliens" side and we meet up on the other side of immigration.
Best of luck with all the officials,
SARAH