I've been considering the legal issue, not from a moral viewpoint on polygamy. By the way, I'm Muslim

ESC
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Well you have the rules in front of you, which are very clear and have been discussed in detail. Now this is becoming a case of taking a horse to the water but being unable to make it drink water. If you ignore the rules then there is not much I can do.Casa wrote:I was under the impression that we were discussing whether the marriage (before divorce) was recognised as valid under British law for immigration purposes, not whether a crime of bigamy had been committed.
Well I am just going by the legal opinion that I received. The rules also agree with that legal opinion. The link above also agrees with that opinion.Casa wrote:I believe this thread will continue in the same vein until you find someone who agrees with your view or you receive a decision on your application.
As I've posted before, I can only wish you well with the outcome.
The rule 278 that you posted and the rule 278 that I posted is different, so it follows that the rule has been changed perhaps in July 2012, which is why you have not been able to come up with any refusal under the circumstances after this date and neither have I.Casa wrote:I'm assuming you'll take the view that the Immigration rules post-July 12 no longer permit refusals such as posted previously and here below, even though there has been no amendment to British law. Strange as the Rules for spouse visa applications became tougher generally, not more lenient.
http://www.immigrationboards.com/immigr ... 99313.html
"I married my second wife while my divorce was underway with my first wife in U.K. After 2 years of divorce I applied for a spouce visa for my second wife which was rejected, Reason given by UKBA is that my second marraige is not valid since I was already married to my first wife at that time under uk law. first marraige was in U.K and second one was in india. Dear members kindly advice on how to resolve this issue. thanks in advance."
The rule 278 stated in that document is the one that I posted, so your rule 278 is no longer in existence.Casa wrote:House of Commons - May 2014 file:///C:/Users/User/Downloads/SN05051%20(1).pdf
Polygamy and the recognition of polygamous marriages
Immigration issues8
Section 2 of the Immigration Act 1988 and paragraphs 278 - 280 of the Immigration Rules
(HC 395 of 1993-4 as amended)
primary consideration should be given to whether the marriage is valid in United
Kingdom law. If it is not, the application should be refused on that account alone -
without considering the provisions of the Rules relating to polygamy;
With respect, a marriage that takes place before one party is divorced, cannot be considered legal under British law.
The document states it is Government policy to prevent the formation of polygamous households in this country. Well if you are married abroad then it does not lead to formation of polygamous households in this country. If you get divorced and then apply for settlement then it does not lead to formation of polygamous households in this country.Casa wrote:I give up along with secret.simon and will agree to disagree. Good luck with everything Adnan, keep us updated on your application.
That's what I believed sushdmehta, but I gave up trying to get my point across.sushdmehta wrote:Adnan111,
It was first published in November 2013, but is "the" current guidance .... that is why it is on the website and not in the archives.
Casa,
Glad to be back. Thanks!!
SET14.8 states: A polygamous spouse may apply for entry clearance and support the application by claiming that a previous marriage (which would otherwise disqualify him / her) has been dissolved.sushdmehta wrote:Thought the following (current) guidance may help find answer(s), hence sharing:
Guidance - Polygamous / potential polygamous marriages: SET14
the refusal point was that:secret.simon wrote:@Alil2014,
Can you provide more details of the 2014 case? Adnan111's contention is that the rules in 2014 were different to the rules in 2010.
Adnan111 argues that a second marriage in Pakistan become legally recognised in the UK when the first marriage is dissolved, whereas Casa's and my understanding is that the second marriage is not recognised in the UK if it was held when the sponsor was not "free to marry" under UK law.
You really had me frightened there for a little while, especially with alil2014 chipping in towards the endCasa wrote:Whew! Good news Adnan.Thanks for letting us know.