According to the naturalization law, yes, your child is a US citizen because he's born on US soil, regardless of the reason you are in the US or your Immigration status.
if any of your spouse, parents is an Indian then you can apply for Indian citizenship....and if your child is born in India you can be an Indian citizen
yes the child can get citizenship of Canada eventhough he born for pakistanees.
Yes, the child does acquire US citizenship by the law of land. Just don't forget to get the birth certificate and apply for a US passport for the child.
No, citizenship is not given to parents based on their child's place of birth.
Yes, a child of divorced parents can have two passports if each parent holds citizenship in a different country and the child is eligible for citizenship in both countries.
Yes, a child born in the USA to Indian parents can automatically acquire citizenship through birthright citizenship, as guaranteed by the 14th Amendment of the United States Constitution.
Not necessarily. The child will assume the heritage of his/her parents - where they hold citizenship.
If the parents are US citizens, then the child gets duel citizenship (citizenship in the country he/she is born in [depending on local laws], and US citizenship). Any person naturalized in the US or by American parents is a US citizen.
The US will recognize the child as an American citizen. Japan may allow them to claim Japanese citizenship, but I don't believe they do.
through naturalization. More info: Anyone born in the US is a citizen by birth. Other than this a person can acquire or derive citizenship. A child born abroad to US citizen parent or parents is a citizen of the US as long as a few eligibility conditions are met by the parents. This birth can be recorded within 5 years at the Consulate abroad. The document issued at registration is proof of the child's citizenship. The child can also get a Certificate of Citizenship and a US passport as further proof. When the parents naturalize as US citizens, any child they have below the age of 18 and having a green card is automatically granted citizenship. This child will have to get a Certificate of Citizenship and a US passport as proof of US citizenship.
The child would automatically acquire U.S. citizenship due to being born in the U.S., according to the principle of jus soli. Additionally, the child may be eligible for Chinese citizenship through the father's nationality and Filipino citizenship through the mother's nationality, depending on the countries' citizenship laws regarding descent.
No. The citizenship requirements are that any person born in Canada after February 15, 1977 is not a citizen unless, at the time of the birth, at least one parent was already a Canadian citizen or permanent resident as well. Thus, because neither parent is a Canadian citizen, the child will not be either. Egypt will still claim them as (or they can claim themselves to be) a citizen of Egypt though, as they were born to two Egyptian parents.