Ahmedkawsar053 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 27, 2020 9:46 pm
Hello,
I have a very specific situation I need some help with.
I am a Bangladeshi national and French resident. I applied for a visit visa and arrived in the UK from France in January 2020.
I travelled with my wife who was living with me for 3 months in France, she is a British National.
We ended up facing some unexpected problems - my wife ended up becoming a carer for my brother in law in the UK and she herself became diagnosed with a disability. She now receives carers allowance and the limited capability for work and work related activity element of universal credit.
We applied for FLRM on the basis of exceptional circumstances. We could not apply for a spouse visa as my wife had only been received carers allowance for 3 months. If we returned to France or Bangladesh, my wife would not be able to care for my brother in law. If I left without her, I could not monitor her disability (severe depression and arthritis).
Of course the home office service points are only open to customers who applied earlier on, but if I were to have an appointment for my biometrics soon, how long do you think it’ll take for my application to be assessed?
I would also appreciate advice on what the chances of my application successful would be, based on the reasons I provided.
Please keep in mind I have no children but we are trying for a baby.
Kindest regards!
You probably confused France and United Kingdom when it comes to immigration.
In France, the rule is: just stay by any means. Fill as many applications as possible. Make it complex. Drag it over time. Then sooner or later, they are fed up of seeing you and they will issue a residence card.
I don't believe that this is the correct approach with the Home Office.
Sorry to be honest, but you sound like just someone who want to flout the rules. As you may know, there are a lot of British people living across the world with their other half and kids because they don't meet the criteria to return to the UK. There are even separated households, involving kids who see a mother or a father on FaceTime or Zoom. This is just to articulate how strong these immigration barriers are.
You can't just expect to jump the stack by claiming your wife has a brother in law with arthritis and depression. In my family network, I can easily identify 5 people with arthritis and twice as many feeling depressed to various levels. In this day and age, pretty much everyone has someone in the family with depression, obsessional troubles, insomnia, epigastric hernia... etc. But you can hardly build a valid immigration case by the claim that this person needs your constant care.
Your wife is British. She can stay as much as she wants. She doesn't need to justify her presence by being a carer of anyone. But she doesn't meet the criteria to sponsor you.
There are other British people who MUST stay in the UK because themselves have NHS treatments, or kids at school... but they can't bring their other half because they don't meet the criteria.
So beyond your specific circumstances, there is nothing that says if a British can't leave the UK for whatever reason, the Home Office must drop the revenue and housing eligibility criteria.