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Permanent residence for my wife
Posted: Tue Jan 18, 2011 1:41 am
by carlo69
I am Italian and my wife Ghanian, we are married since 2004 and we live in Uk.
The Uk Border Agency has asked to myself a lot of evidence of Exercising Treaty Rights in UK:
- original full birth certificate confirming parentage. Do i need to produce a original certificate translation with it? If yes were can i get it?
- the last 5 years p60s,pay slips, bank statements showing income as credit entries and or originsl signed and dated emplyers` letter etc. i do not have all the p60s, pay slips bank statements for the 5 years, can i show some of them ramdomly?
please anybody can help me.
Carlo
Re: Permanent residence for my wife
Posted: Tue Jan 18, 2011 6:12 pm
by Plum70
carlo69 wrote:I am Italian and my wife Ghanian, we are married since 2004 and we live in Uk.
The Uk Border Agency has asked to myself a lot of evidence of Exercising Treaty Rights in UK:
- original full birth certificate confirming parentage. Do i need to produce a original certificate translation with it? If yes were can i get it?
That's unusual... they would normally require a passport or ID for identity verification. Do you not have either?
Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 9:12 pm
by carlo69
Hi
Sorry to answer now, yes we sent my italian passport and my wife`s Ghanian one, took 2 months to come back with the request of all above evidence.
Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2011 8:18 am
by 86ti
You said in your original post that the birth certificate is to confirm parentage. Is your child a non-EEA national too? Otherwise the embassy cannot ask for this document. It would only make sense to present it, by your own initiative, if you wanted to guard against allegations of having a sham marriage.
EDIT: Silly me! You are quite obviously applying for PR rather than an EEA FP!
Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2011 8:44 am
by 86ti
Let's hope I got it right this time: so you need the birth certificate for your child? Where was is issued? It would require an Apostille if the issuing country is a signatory of this Hague Convention. If not the certification/legalisation process may be more complicated. Contact the embassy of the issuing country. Translation will be necessary too.
Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2011 9:45 pm
by carlo69
Hi 86ti
Thanks for your replay.
Sorry for the mess up that i have created from the original post.
Yes, we are appying for my wife PR.
I have three children born in London, they have an italian passport. Actually the UK Border Agency asked for a valid passport for a non-EEA national (my second daughter) which i do not have it because she was born in London and she has an Italian passport !!........... Why? Maybe the BA made a mistake?
The BA also asked me (father) the following evidence including my birth certificate. My birth certificate was issued in Italy from the town where i was born (i got it in the post today). Do i need to produce an original certified translation with it if applicable?
Also last 5 years p60s,pay slips, bank statements showing income as credit entries and or original signed and dated emplyers` letter etc.
Actually i do not have all the p60s, pay slips bank statements for the 5 years, can i show some of them ramdomly?
Thanks
Posted: Tue Jan 25, 2011 8:08 am
by 86ti
It is totally unclear to me why your birth certificate would be needed. It is not a document that the UKBA can just ask for. If your daughter is Italian then you have to prove that by including the passport. A valid passport is a required document. If you can't do that now why not do it later? If you have included her on the EEA3 form the UKBA should not ask for documents for a non EEA-national.
If you have missing documents regarding your work history you may want to contact the employer of that time to confirm that you have been working. Also, if you have been paying tax and NIN contributions the HMRC would surely know about that. Maybe they can provide you with the required information.
Posted: Tue Jan 25, 2011 10:41 pm
by carlo69
Thanhs a lot for that.
Tomorrow i am going to send all the evidence they requested complete with the family passports.
Fingers crossed my wife will get the PR.
Carlo