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smiles345
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when ?

Post by smiles345 » Wed Dec 05, 2007 5:47 pm

do anybody know that when the court considering the 4-5 yrs Permanant Residence case? is that on December 18th?

pls reply

mansawant
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Post by mansawant » Wed Dec 05, 2007 10:05 pm

Hi,

The hearing of the case will be on 17th and 18th December.

Thnaks & Regards,
Mansawant

Siggi
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Post by Siggi » Thu Dec 06, 2007 11:23 am

Smiles,
Really, it no longer matters if or not the JR takes place as people have already lost money and paid for extending their visa's.
If and I repeat if the JR is sucessful, are the HO going to paid back all the money they exstorted from people who have extended their visa, I don't think so!
No we have lost and HO have won.

SYH
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Post by SYH » Thu Dec 06, 2007 11:24 am

Siggi wrote:Smiles,
Really, it no longer matters if or not the JR takes place as people have already lost money and paid for extending their visa's.
If and I repeat if the JR is sucessful, are the HO going to paid back all the money they exstorted from people who have extended their visa, I don't think so!
No we have lost and HO have won.
MOOT

Siggi
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Post by Siggi » Thu Dec 06, 2007 11:45 am

SYH
I suppose you don't really care now that you have your ILR?
Good luck to you!

SYH
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Post by SYH » Thu Dec 06, 2007 11:47 am

Siggi wrote:SYH
I suppose you don't really care now that you have your ILR?
Good luck to you!
Thanks. but it still impacts me so I care.
Because the remedy should be to put you back in the place you would have been. Where I would have been is at citizenship so if the JR goes in favor of the aggrieved applicants of 4 to 5 years, I hope the court includes those who would have applied for citizenship based on the previous accelerated schedule.

Siggi
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Post by Siggi » Thu Dec 06, 2007 11:59 am

I agree that what you are saying is the remedy, but you know how they work.
Effected will just have to swollow a bitter pill.

smiles345
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Location: bristol

thanx

Post by smiles345 » Thu Dec 06, 2007 11:59 am

many thanx for all your kind reply. do you guys think that it will be favourable to the immigrants?

Siggi
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Post by Siggi » Thu Dec 06, 2007 12:02 pm

My best geuss is that those effected will get a apology only!

SYH
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Post by SYH » Thu Dec 06, 2007 12:05 pm

Siggi wrote:My best geuss is that those effected will get a apology only!
well thats why I am not holding my breath
by the time the appeals process is done I wouldhave already gotten it done on their time table (insert expletive here)
Last edited by SYH on Thu Dec 06, 2007 12:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.

smiles345
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Post by smiles345 » Thu Dec 06, 2007 12:15 pm

i think the judiciary is always been favourable to the immigrants. HSMP and the doctors are best examples.

goldfish
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Post by goldfish » Thu Dec 06, 2007 12:42 pm

It still matters for those of us who arrived under the 4 year rules and but have not reached 4 years yet. A favourable ruling would mean getting ILR then citizenship one year earlier. I am happy living in the UK but the days out of the country requirement makes me feel as though I am under self-imposed house arrest :(

Am not very hopeful re the results of the JR though, or that the BIA will actually implement changes if they are successful... :(

jimquk
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Post by jimquk » Thu Dec 06, 2007 10:01 pm

My best geuss is that those effected will get a apology only!
You must be joking! How many times have the courts ruled that Home Office policies toward asylum seekers were illegal? Far from apologising, they always say that they are disappointed but will work out a way to do the same thing, but lawfully - changing the law if necessary. In practice, they may just leave the matter lie, but as far as I know they have never ever apologised for what they have done.

A prime example was denial of support to late and opportunistic asylum claimants in 2003-4. http://www.refugeecouncil.org.uk/OneSto ... 97ecf662ce When this went through Parliament, it was suggested that late claimants would be those who had been in the UK months or years before claiming. As soon as it came into law, it was applied to anyone here over 24 hours. Eventually, such a harsh policy was declared unlawful by the courts. The Home Office now applies it very sparingly, only to those who it thinks the courts will agree are "opportunists".

Ten thousand asylum claimants, legally present, not allowed to work, were forced to live on the streets for months until the courts ruled that this breached their human rights. Many went on to win their asylum claims, after the usual Home Office obsruction. If there were any justice, one might have hoped to see the Home Sec of the day up in court for human rights abuses, but of course nothing of the sort happened, and on the contrary far from apologising the Home Office declared its intention of continuing to apply the policy wherever possible.
The Refused are coming day-by-day nearer to freedom.

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