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Dont forget these concessions may be scrapped as a result of the new immiogration revamp!!!John wrote:Ordinarily time in the UK on a student visa does not count towards getting ILR.
However it does count under 10-year and 14-year applications .... Long Residence.
HHH99 wrote:the form is set o i believe. Chess dude is it really getting scrapped because I know a lot of people including myself who are kind of waiting on it.
But it makes no attempt to. The points system is merely about employment-based immigration .... economic migration. The document you refer to also makes no reference to family immigration .. fiance(e), spouse, unmarried partner or child settlement ... but those will continue in a non-points based way.Chess wrote:I cant tell whether it will be scrapped - but the new points system has no allowance for the 10/14 year rule and the Ancestry Visa allowance...
Chess wrote:I cant tell whether it will be scrapped - but the new points system has no allowance for the 10/14 year rule and the Ancestry Visa allowance...
I'm glad this came up! I'm normally quite good at reading, but until your post, John, I'd completely overlooked the opening paragraph of the consultation document - and I'm fairly sure from looking at conversations both here and elsewhere that I'm not the only one....John wrote:But it makes no attempt to. The points system is merely about employment-based immigration .... economic migration. The document you refer to also makes no reference to family immigration .. fiance(e), spouse, unmarried partner or child settlement ... but those will continue in a non-points based way.
There is one oddity, though; it defines the limits of the exercise, but for some reason it only specifies a couple of the things that it doesn't seek to cover.The purpose of this consultation exercise is to seek early input on the way forward for a new single pointsbased system for managed migration, i.e. routes to work, train or study in the UK. It does not cover asylum or refugees.
Yes it has. Following is from the Immigration Directorates' Instructions on the Long Residence Concession - Chapter 18. I assume that "Home Office practice" can be taken as being government policy...Chess wrote:This has never been Government policypenanglad wrote:There must be some route for normalising the immigration status of illegal long residents, .
On 14 October 1969, the United Kingdom ratified the European Convention on Establishment, Article 3(3) which provides that nationals of any contracting party who have been lawfully residing for more than 10 years in the territory of another party may only be expelled for reasons of national security or for particularly serious reasons relating to public order, public health or morality. Home Office practice has been to extend this provision in three respects:
- to include all foreign nationals;
to grant indefinite leave rather than simply refrain from removing such a person; and
to allow those who have been here illegally to benefit.
Not clearly enough, evidently.Chess wrote:Ppron,
as you clearly stated a 'practise' is not tantamount to 'policy'
I do indeed remember seeing press reports of this case - which is not, of course, the same as knowing the facts of it...Chess wrote: I dont know if you recall; there was a period (about 3 years ago) when a 65 year old Grand mother was threatened with deportation to the USA when he had lived in the UK for nearly 40 yrs.
Incidentally one of his sons had served in Iraq.
Only a last minute minesterial intervention stopped the Grand Ma from being deported..
I think that the IDI extract I quoted speaks for itself. The fact that a number of the chapters and annexes in both the Immigration and Nationality Directorates instructions are marked "not disclosed" are in themselves evidence that it is entirely possible for a government to have policies that they choose not to publicise - or publish at all.Chess wrote: If you think long term 'illegal' residence normalisation is Govt Policy then they would have seriously advertised it as many of the 0.5 to 1.0m 'overstayers' in the Uk would have benefited...