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Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator
honey2008 wrote:Ok Boss
Discriminatory??? If the United Kingdom wished, they could have long ago decided not let any of us into this country. This is a sovereign nation with the sole right to decide who comes, who goes, and on what basis. A right that is only limited by the concept of native born citizenship.abhisheks9 wrote:... home office are discriminatory towards PBS in general and totally against tier-1 general applicants in particular...
In my opinion, the government of the United Kingdom gave their word in writing, and they were obliged honor their word. When the tried to reneg, the HSMP visa holders were able to call them out on it. Unfortunately they were still able to dishonor themselves with regards to the Work Permit holders and allowed by the courts to go back on their written word.O_Relly wrote:@ CR001 - Just out of curiosity, what is your opinion on the HSMP forum Judicial Review and the high courts ruling in favour of the HSMP forum on 8th April 2008 against the changes to the new extention test brought in by the then UKBA/Home office ?
Well that was the result of that court ruling. From that experience the UK learned that they needed to never again attempt retroactive changes. And with Tier 1, they haven't.O_Relly wrote:And on the basis of this court ruling people on HSMP JR can still today continue to extend their visas should they choose not to apply for an ILR.
I think it was wrong and dishonorable for the UK to go back on their written word.O_Relly wrote:Do you feel it was wrong for the HSMP forum to challenge the UKBA in a court of law?
And this really is a key point. It doesn't matter if they are 'wrong' or 'right'. If they want us all to leave, that's it. We leave. There is no 'right' to be in the UK except for native born UK citizens. Even naturalized citizens can have their citizen stripped and subsequently be deported. As a sovereign nation, this a decision they can make at any time.O_Relly wrote:Am not trying to justify the ignorance of the OP here, just trying to point out that the home office has been in the wrong in the past according to the high court.
There is something called a right to fair treatment, and that is a basic human right, which no parliament can legislate against.There is no 'right' to be in the UK except for native born UK citizens. Even naturalized citizens can have their citizen stripped and subsequently be deported. As a sovereign nation, this a decision they can make at any time.
The children born in the UK to naturalised citizens can also have their UK citizenship removed now under the new laws. They can do this as they won't be stateless because their birth also gives them a claim to their parents citizenship.ouflak1 wrote:There is no 'right' to be in the UK except for native born UK citizens. Even naturalized citizens can have their citizen stripped and subsequently be deported. As a sovereign nation, this a decision they can make at any time.
Agreed.quantum1 wrote:WIth HSMP the way the visa was issued it created legitimate expectation of settlement. This is not the case with TIer 1 General as the wording was changed and a qualifier was added that specifically said nothing was being promised. The cases are different
I don't think Tier 1(General) can switch to Tier 1(Entrepreneur).abhisheks9 wrote:@caheda
Trust me I am really sad for your case, and to be brutally honest within existing rules you got no option other than switching to other PBS based visa like tier-2(general) or tier-1(entrepreneur).
You can switch to tier 1 entrepreneur from tier 1 general, i have re-checked from official ukiv website.Petaltop wrote: I don't think Tier 1(General) can switch to Tier 1(Entrepreneur).
Tier 1 General was meant to be for highly skilled people. That's why the option is there for those that really are highly skilled to switch to Tier 2 General if they didn't use their visa staight away.
Hi Abhishek, you also had/have this issue?abhisheks9 wrote:@caheda
Trust me I am really sad for your case, and to be brutally honest within existing rules you got no option other than switching to other PBS based visa like tier-2(general) or tier-1(entrepreneur).
Right now I highly suggest to talk to solicitors as well as tier-2 sponsersers, and so far you are 3rd person in this website forum to have suffered due to closure.
I (with admin of my fb group in my signature) already foresaw this scenario and were trying to bring people together but we are only been discouraged and demotivated by most people here so far. Still we are sure that ukvi has been unfair, discriminatory and legally you stand strong chance against if go for judicial review.
I have almost become broken record now
Just wanted to update this a bit. They can only remove the citizenship of children *IF* their birth allows them to claim their parent's citizenship and automatically acquire it. This may not be the case. An example would be if the child were born to parents who had already relinquished any other previous (non-UK) citizenship before the child's birth. Almost no country in the world has rules that allow a child to later have any claim to their parent's relinquished citizenship, except a few that allow an ancestry process that usually takes several years and requires permanent/primary residency.Petaltop wrote:The children born in the UK to naturalised citizens can also have their UK citizenship removed now under the new laws. They can do this as they won't be stateless because their birth also gives them a claim to their parents citizenship.ouflak1 wrote:There is no 'right' to be in the UK except for native born UK citizens. Even naturalized citizens can have their citizen stripped and subsequently be deported. As a sovereign nation, this a decision they can make at any time.
@ PranvayuPranvayu wrote:Basis for Discretionary Application is that my Tier 1 extension is application was to be due in January 2016. I was not made aware by UKBA on change of rules and my application should be considered according to the timeline set by UKBA when I was granted the first extension.
I appreciate that this application is likely to result in a refusal but I will appeal and hope that common sense prevails.
What I am trying to ascertain is if the appeal period could be counted towards legal residence in UK and count towards ILTR ?