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Are you trying to say HO could not remove someone in the past, but later on rule changed and makes them illegal for that period now?PrestonLancs wrote:A verdit of unlawful detention does not mean that a court ruled that your stay in UK was legal. Two totally different things.
Once your appeal rights were exhausted, you became illegal.
If HO could not remove you, that does not mean your stay in UK becomes legal.
A grant under legacy does not make your previous stay legal either.
ILR and citizenship are two completely unrelated statuses, both governed by different Acts of Parliament. A grant of one does not entail the grant of the other. It sounds like you may have been granted ILR either under a long residency provision or even outside the rules. If it were outside the rules, it is possible for it to be granted even assuming a period of illegal status.zakes123 wrote:How could they grant ILR if I was in breach.
Interesting question. The way I would argue it is that detention by itself does not rectify any breach of immigration laws in the UK. To the contrary, it could be argued that detention meant that you did not have the choice of rectifying the illegal stay by leaving. When you were in detention, did you in any way communicate that you were OK with being deported? Any other indication could have been construed as wishing to continue to stay illegally in the UK.zakes123 wrote:How could I have been in breach when I was in detention in 2005
Inability to remove somebody does not make their stay legal. The Home Office has to follow the law and go through procedures to remove people. While it is going through such procedures, if the person's underlying leave has expired, he is in breach of immigration laws.Siraj ud-Daulah wrote:Are you trying to say HO could not remove someone in the past, but later on rule changed and makes them illegal for that period now? How could a grant not be legal?
Having allowed you remain the UK / provide accommodation / unlawful detention etc. etc. does not make your illegal stay in the UK legal. The day you exhausted your appeal rights to contest refusal of asylum and any associated section 3C leave you became an overstayer and ....Your legal stay in the UK started on 12/03/2010. The earliest you could have applied for naturalisation was 12/03/2015.zakes123 wrote:I have ILR since 12/03/2010 given outside rules
No. When your appeal rights are exhausted, your stay becomes illegal. Even if your Article 8 application were to succeed, the amount of time between your appeal rights ending and Artocle 8 succeeding would have been illegal as there was no legal basis for your stay.zakes123 wrote:First, did I not have the right to be here whilst my further representations were pending despite my appeal rights being exhausted?
No. All that it means was that the judge felt that being held in prison was not the appropriate reaction to your being in the country illegally. A person who is fined or given a conditional sentence is guilty of having broken the law to the same extent as a person who is jailed. And with respect (no intention to hurt feelings), you were in breach of immigration laws.zakes123 wrote:Second does the fact that the court ruled in my favour (against my detention) not mean that the judge actually agreed with me that I had legitimate grounds to be present in UK whilst my applications were being considered?
No, that was the alternative to being in prison. Being on probation does not make you any less guilty than being in prison.zakes123 wrote:Third, does not an arrangement for my release from detention and having a reporting order in place suggest some type of temporary admission and therefore should be deemed legal?
I have answered these points in my previous post. Just to repeat, even if the HO did grant temporary admission, it is only a grant going forward and you would have remained illegal between the expiry of your appeal rights and the grant of temporary admission.zakes123 wrote: "If HO could not remove you, that does not mean your stay in UK becomes legal."
My stay was based on my article 8 application submitted after having exhausted my appeal rights. However, how could I return to my country of origin whilst HO retained my passport. Their failure to remove me whilst I was in their hands with all their resources at their disposal only suggests that it would have been even more impossible for me to do so myself having neither the means nor the documentation. And once the failed removal was established, should HO not have granted a temporary admission to regularise my stay?
@sushdmehta, surely you mean 12/03/2020.sushdmehta wrote:Your legal stay in the UK started on 12/03/2010. The earliest you could have applied for naturalisation was 12/03/2015.
The OP states that the ILR was granted on 12/03/10 ... so the earliest the OP could have applied for naturalisation was 12/03/2015 (after five years legal stay in the UK). Because the OP applied in 10/09/2014 ... which brings the period between 10/09/2009 and 11/03/2010 into qualifying residential period when OP was an illegal migrant .. hence the refusal.secret.simon wrote:@sushdmehta, surely you mean 12/03/2020.sushdmehta wrote:Your legal stay in the UK started on 12/03/2010. The earliest you could have applied for naturalisation was 12/03/2015.
Indeed, and even those who submitted before the change are caught up on it. Such a shame to what message Britain is sending out to the rest of the immigrants across the world. In the long run, more high skilled immigration is bound to be routed towards other countries, instead of here.sushdmehta wrote:Aah! Laws have changed while I was away from the forum!
Apologies .....
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