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Yes Its trueicehouse256 wrote:I just found out that the HO won the judgement on minimum income threshold. Is this true ? https://www.gov.uk/government/news/home ... -threshold
Can she apply for derivative rights through EEA route?Kombwe wrote:@ nomorepride I can tell you that you will be wasting your money if you lodged an application , you have only only been in the country for 2.5 years . Just because your child was born in this country it doesn't mean they will grant you. Please can you give the background of case and the grounds you are applying on.
@Kobwe that I am new in the country is not a ground for refusal, I have seen those who came less than a year and was granted. I applied on the flr fp form as a mother of a british child. My question was based on my older daughter which you have failed to answer. I am positive and will come here in few weeks to testify to d goodness of God.Kombwe wrote:@ nomorepride I can tell you that you will be wasting your money if you lodged an application , you have only only been in the country for 2.5 years . Just because your child was born in this country it doesn't mean they will grant you. Please can you give the background of case and the grounds you are applying on.
I'm curious through what route will you be granted if your british child is 2.5 years?nomorepride wrote:@Kobwe that I am new in the country is not a ground for refusal, I have seen those who came less than a year and was granted. I applied on the flr fp form as a mother of a british child. My question was based on my older daughter which you have failed to answer. I am positive and will come here in few weeks to testify to d goodness of God.Kombwe wrote:@ nomorepride I can tell you that you will be wasting your money if you lodged an application , you have only only been in the country for 2.5 years . Just because your child was born in this country it doesn't mean they will grant you. Please can you give the background of case and the grounds you are applying on.
Sorry if I didn't make it clear. I was clarifying about the 2 year old child.nomorepride wrote:@Kobwe that I am new in the country is not a ground for refusal, I have seen those who came less than a year and was granted. I applied on the flr fp form as a mother of a british child. My question was based on my older daughter which you have failed to answer. I am positive and will come here in few weeks to testify to d goodness of God.Kombwe wrote:@ nomorepride I can tell you that you will be wasting your money if you lodged an application , you have only only been in the country for 2.5 years . Just because your child was born in this country it doesn't mean they will grant you. Please can you give the background of case and the grounds you are applying on.
You are clearly a faster typer than me! Well 15 years is no joke goodluck with the proceedingssubtlegirl wrote:Sorry if I didn't make it clear. I was clarifying about the 2 year old child.nomorepride wrote:@Kobwe that I am new in the country is not a ground for refusal, I have seen those who came less than a year and was granted. I applied on the flr fp form as a mother of a british child. My question was based on my older daughter which you have failed to answer. I am positive and will come here in few weeks to testify to d goodness of God.Kombwe wrote:@ nomorepride I can tell you that you will be wasting your money if you lodged an application , you have only only been in the country for 2.5 years . Just because your child was born in this country it doesn't mean they will grant you. Please can you give the background of case and the grounds you are applying on.
If she is successful in her leave to remain then your suggestion is the route I'm aware of.
Bare in mind that's exactly what I'm using and I've been refused and I'm now going through judicial review.
My mum is British and I'm her only child. I don't have ties to my home country and I've been here almost 15 years. Yet they've refused me.
I didnt mention her in my application because her tier 4 visa is still valid till 2016 though her course finishes mid 2015. My fear was if i mention her and she was asked to submit a seperate application, God forbid if unsuccessful her current leave might be curtailed.Believe2013 wrote:Sorry Point of clarity subtle-girl - my initial reponse was with regards to nomorepride's 20yr old daughter( if my maths doesnt let me down)
Nomorepride can very well apply as a primary carer of her 2.5 yr old and Goodluck to her! The conundrum though is she would have mention her 20 year old daughter in her application which will prompt the Ho to ask her to submit an application in her own right as an adult!
@Believe2013Believe2013 wrote:Hi @narrow i was the one that sent you a message
welcome to the family as I would like to call it.. Anyways, I urge you to put in an application before you turn 18. After then, you are classified as an adult, things are very tough in the terms of immigration legislation at the moment. You do not qualify for the 7 year concession so your options are limited to private life, compassionate grounds or asylum/article 3. You have a sister as a guardian and you WOULD have to state CATEGORICALLY your lack of cultural, social & political ties to your country of origin. Mentioning your parents could compromise your application without a doubt. Please note, I am not advising you to lie to the HO. Time is of essence and your weapon at the moment is SECTION 55 Children's ACT 2009 'Every Child Matters' You only have a few weeks in which you can apply so if you can submit an application please do so. Have you sought legal advice and what are the lawyers saying?
All the best!
greatreasons wrote:Hello everyone,
I'm need advice regarding my FLR(FP) application and would be grateful for any help. I'll ask my question then follow up with my back story.
I believe I meet the criteria for indefinite leave based Private life in the UK based on having strong ties in the UK as well as Family life as a parent (5 or 10 year route) and I'm uncertain which category I should tick. Is it possible to tick both.
For indefinite leave to remain this will be long and expensive I believe, however I could have a strong enough case.
Basically I came here as a child age 16, my mum is now a british citizen, I've been year for almost 13 years, closer to 14 really and I do not have a family to go home to. I do not have a relationship with my dad, nor my siblings but they are mostly children anyway, he never took responsibility of me. I'm from the Caribbean - Tobago.
I have a young baby who is british but the dad and I do not have any relationship. It is complicated and there is NO chance of us having a relationship. Sadly he wants nothing to do with my baby, I'm guess I should be happy he registered her and applied for her passport.
I may make this a separate thread as well, but is it possible to tick more than one category for FLR(FP)? If which is my best option?
Daniel97 wrote:greatreasons wrote:Hello everyone,
I'm need advice regarding my FLR(FP) application and would be grateful for any help. I'll ask my question then follow up with my back story.
I believe I meet the criteria for indefinite leave based Private life in the UK based on having strong ties in the UK as well as Family life as a parent (5 or 10 year route) and I'm uncertain which category I should tick. Is it possible to tick both.
For indefinite leave to remain this will be long and expensive I believe, however I could have a strong enough case.
Basically I came here as a child age 16, my mum is now a british citizen, I've been year for almost 13 years, closer to 14 really and I do not have a family to go home to. I do not have a relationship with my dad, nor my siblings but they are mostly children anyway, he never took responsibility of me. I'm from the Caribbean - Tobago.
I have a young baby who is british but the dad and I do not have any relationship. It is complicated and there is NO chance of us having a relationship. Sadly he wants nothing to do with my baby, I'm guess I should be happy he registered her and applied for her passport.
I may make this a separate thread as well, but is it possible to tick more than one category for FLR(FP)? If which is my best option?
Hi
You said you came to uk 13yrs ago and then you are 16 yrs old,that means you are 29 now,you can not succeed on Article 8 with that as you have not spend half of your age in uk(14 and half)
Secondly it will be bit difficult to also succeed for the years you spend here on family life regardless your mum or siblings are British citizens,HO will treat your application as an adult,
I think the best option is to use your child for the application,even though you have nothing again with the father,and remember to fill destitute form to the HO,so that you won't be charge for application as you are not working and also when the application is granted,they won't be no recourse to public fund.
Am not a solicitor but I know a lot
Thanks Daniel,Daniel97 wrote:greatreasons wrote:Hello everyone,
I'm need advice regarding my FLR(FP) application and would be grateful for any help. I'll ask my question then follow up with my back story.
I believe I meet the criteria for indefinite leave based Private life in the UK based on having strong ties in the UK as well as Family life as a parent (5 or 10 year route) and I'm uncertain which category I should tick. Is it possible to tick both.
For indefinite leave to remain this will be long and expensive I believe, however I could have a strong enough case.
Basically I came here as a child age 16, my mum is now a british citizen, I've been year for almost 13 years, closer to 14 really and I do not have a family to go home to. I do not have a relationship with my dad, nor my siblings but they are mostly children anyway, he never took responsibility of me. I'm from the Caribbean - Tobago.
I have a young baby who is british but the dad and I do not have any relationship. It is complicated and there is NO chance of us having a relationship. Sadly he wants nothing to do with my baby, I'm guess I should be happy he registered her and applied for her passport.
I may make this a separate thread as well, but is it possible to tick more than one category for FLR(FP)? If which is my best option?
Hi
You said you came to uk 13yrs ago and then you are 16 yrs old,that means you are 29 now,you can not succeed on Article 8 with that as you have not spend half of your age in uk(14 and half)
Secondly it will be bit difficult to also succeed for the years you spend here on family life regardless your mum or siblings are British citizens,HO will treat your application as an adult,
I think the best option is to use your child for the application,even though you have nothing again with the father,and remember to fill destitute form to the HO,so that you won't be charge for application as you are not working and also when the application is granted,they won't be no recourse to public fund.
Am not a solicitor but I know a lot