paulp wrote:sosolid1234 wrote:
Hi Paula,
What is the difference the Visa still expired in country or Out of country and was renewed by an immigration officer. The main point is that the Visa expired before renewal.
SoSolid, it's paulp, not paula. The big difference is that you were an overstayer, i.e. illegally resident in the country, the opposite of legal of which you need 10
continuous years to qualify for the 10 year ILR. No other visa application can change illegal into legal I'm afraid.
Hi Paulp,
So are you saying that the fact that my Visas were subsequently granted does not count for any thing and I was an illegal resident since 2002 when i submitted late.
Also a note taking into account what Lord Avebury pointed out in house of lords
http://www.theyworkforyou.com/lords/?id ... 3-17a.87.2
"A 28-day grace period will be included in the Immigration Rules as part of the tier 1 process in March 2008 ... This will allow those who send their applications within 28 days of their leave expiring to continue with their application. That is a very helpful approach on our part, which will probably be welcomed, not least by immigration law practitioners".—[Official Report, 16/10/07; col. 661.]
He repeated that assurance later, making it crystal clear that the 28-day period would allow a person whose application had been rejected because of an inadvertent clerical error or the submission of the wrong document to put in a new application within 28 days. When I put that to him, he replied:
"Yes, my Lords, that is what I am saying".—[Official Report, 23/10/07; col. 996.]
Also Baroness Warwick of Undercliffe mentioned the follwoing
"However, it is not all bad news. Following lobbying by Universities UK and the UK Council for International Student Affairs—UKCISA—we were pleased and relieved when, in January 2008, the BIA announced at the joint education taskforce meeting:
"Applications received within 28 days of the expiry of leave will be considered in the normal way ... those within 6 months in exceptional circumstances, but those outside that period, refused".