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It is a terrible situation but if you are hurting then it is, perhaps, the pain from a self-inflicted wound as it would appear that you have voluntarily stepped outside the immigration laws that everyone else is obliged to follow.alf32 wrote:This is just a terrible situation
alf32 wrote:My husband sent in FLRM yesterday, to arrive on Monday 1st October, which is the day the law changes with regards to overstayers( which he is), will our application be accepted as it will arrive on the 1st itself? Very worried now.
This restriction has been effective since 09-Jul-12 for applications under family route.E-LTRP.2.2. wrote: The applicant must not be in the UK in breach of immigration laws (disregarding any period of overstaying for a period of 28 days or less), unless paragraph EX. . applies.
sushdmehta wrote:This restriction has been effective since 09-Jul-12 for applications under family route.E-LTRP.2.2. wrote: The applicant must not be in the UK in breach of immigration laws (disregarding any period of overstaying for a period of 28 days or less), unless paragraph EX. . applies.
From 01-Oct-12, the restriction is being rolled out for other immigration categories.
The relevant immigration rule, duly applicable on 28-Sep-12, has also been quoted in my previous response for your reference.alf32 wrote:he has overstayed for 5 years now
- the points-based system;
- all working and student routes;
- visiting routes;
- long residency routes;
- discharged HM Forces; or
- UK ancestry routes.
People like me??!! What is not genuine here?! My husband and I have been together for 5 years, and there is nothing more genuine then the relationship we have as husband and wife, you cannot help when and who you fall in love with. You don't have the right to judge, as you don't know the full situation, so in future I suggest white queen that you gain all facts before passing judgement.whitequeen wrote:I'm sorry to say this but people like you is the reason why it is so hard to get visas for the genuine couples here. From the start, you and your husband got married when he was only holding a visitor visa, which doesn't permit him to get married (unless he applied a visa with an intention to marry)..and the fact that he didn't return to his country to apply for the correct visa after that (spouse visa), makes it even worse. And you let him overstay for 5 more years?! Unbelievable! You won't get any sympathy from me. Just make him go back to his country and apply a new visa from there. Be fair to the people here who has been genuine of their intentions from the very start.
When your husband applied for a visit visa, didn't any of you two know that visit visas are for the purpose of tour and just visiting the country for vacation/pleasure, and not getting married? (Regardless of whether you 2 met before or after he got here in the UK) That's already the first offence he did. The second one was not returning to his country after FLR(M) was refused (which was actually not a right application in the first place as visit visas can't be converted to any other visas while in the country). The third one is staying for 5 years even so without a correct visa! You're not being fair to the people who clearly follow the rules. And now it's even harder for them because of these people who doesn't care if they follow the rules or not, whether their reason is "they can't help falling in love". And then end up complaining of their rights when in fact it's their own fault they're in this kind of mess. I know no one can help who you fall in love with. But if you know there are certain rules to follow from the very start, especially him being a foreigner, you gotta do your research before doing any drastic decisions, like most of the people here do. I'm not passing judgement. I'm basing it on the facts that you told here, he's an illegal immigrant in the UK based on the things you said on this thread.alf32 wrote:People like me??!! What is not genuine here?! My husband and I have been together for 5 years, and there is nothing more genuine then the relationship we have as husband and wife, you cannot help when and who you fall in love with. You don't have the right to judge, as you don't know the full situation, so in future I suggest white queen that you gain all facts before passing judgement.
alf32 wrote:My husband is going to apply for a spouse visa from abroad shortly. I am a British citizen. I cover the financial threshold, but am a bit confused with regards to pay slips. I have been in my current job for 4 months, previous to that I was unemployed for 2 months but no benefits were claimed and before that was employed for a year and a half and have all pay slips. Is this sufficient or would I still need 6 months pays slips from my current employer?
I hope someone can advise
D4109125 wrote:No you would possibly not need to be employed for 6 months. However, two questions, 1. What is your current annual gross salary and 2. How much gross have you earned in the last 12 months?alf32 wrote:My husband is going to apply for a spouse visa from abroad shortly. I am a British citizen. I cover the financial threshold, but am a bit confused with regards to pay slips. I have been in my current job for 4 months, previous to that I was unemployed for 2 months but no benefits were claimed and before that was employed for a year and a half and have all pay slips. Is this sufficient or would I still need 6 months pays slips from my current employer?
I hope someone can advise
This is just awful... why are you all judging alf32?? What's wrong with you people?? Everyone makes mistakes, or are you all perfect??? Good luck alf32 with your application!!!whitequeen wrote:When your husband applied for a visit visa, didn't any of you two know that visit visas are for the purpose of tour and just visiting the country for vacation/pleasure, and not getting married? (Regardless of whether you 2 met before or after he got here in the UK) That's already the first offence he did. The second one was not returning to his country after FLR(M) was refused (which was actually not a right application in the first place as visit visas can't be converted to any other visas while in the country). The third one is staying for 5 years even so without a correct visa! You're not being fair to the people who clearly follow the rules. And now it's even harder for them because of these people who doesn't care if they follow the rules or not, whether their reason is "they can't help falling in love". And then end up complaining of their rights when in fact it's their own fault they're in this kind of mess. I know no one can help who you fall in love with. But if you know there are certain rules to follow from the very start, especially him being a foreigner, you gotta do your research before doing any drastic decisions, like most of the people here do. I'm not passing judgement. I'm basing it on the facts that you told here, he's an illegal immigrant in the UK based on the things you said on this thread.alf32 wrote:People like me??!! What is not genuine here?! My husband and I have been together for 5 years, and there is nothing more genuine then the relationship we have as husband and wife, you cannot help when and who you fall in love with. You don't have the right to judge, as you don't know the full situation, so in future I suggest white queen that you gain all facts before passing judgement.
You said you are looking for advice and not constructive criticism. The only advice I can give you is to ask him to return to his country as it's the fairest and the right thing to do and then let him apply a spouse visa from there. Like what Casa said above: "A competent immigration solicitor should have advised you that a FLR(M) application would be invalid as this is for 'further leave to remain'...and is an extension to a current valid visa. He doesn't have a visa to extend."
alf32 wrote:My Husband was advised by solicitors to apply for FLRM when he had already overstayed. His application got refused and has been asked to return home. I have been looking into ways of stopping this and wondered if we could apply for Discretionary Leave to remain? This option was never given to us by our money grabbing solicitors. Does anyone know if we could apply for this now under article 8. Our Oy other option is for my husband to return to his country and apply for a spouse visa, but this could take anything up to 6 months or maybe longer, I am not able to leave the UK as I am the main carer of my mother as well as employed here in the UK, so would not be able to live in my husbands country. Surely under article 8 I cannot be forced to live a desperate life from my husband, this is breaking our hearts. We unfortunately don't have children so have no grounds, but still have family life. Please advise if we should apply for discretionary leave. This is our final resort here in the UK. I am a British citizen.
bishop007 wrote:Sorry to hear about your situation, i would advice you to go back with your husband to his country and apply for a spouse entry permit and i dont think that will take longer than what you gonna experience here with discretional application.alf32 wrote:My Husband was advised by solicitors to apply for FLRM when he had already overstayed. His application got refused and has been asked to return home. I have been looking into ways of stopping this and wondered if we could apply for Discretionary Leave to remain? This option was never given to us by our money grabbing solicitors. Does anyone know if we could apply for this now under article 8. Our Oy other option is for my husband to return to his country and apply for a spouse visa, but this could take anything up to 6 months or maybe longer, I am not able to leave the UK as I am the main carer of my mother as well as employed here in the UK, so would not be able to live in my husbands country. Surely under article 8 I cannot be forced to live a desperate life from my husband, this is breaking our hearts. We unfortunately don't have children so have no grounds, but still have family life. Please advise if we should apply for discretionary leave. This is our final resort here in the UK. I am a British citizen.
Speaking from personal experience and the change of law last year, ive been waiting almost a year now for a result of a discretional application, and as you stated you are a british citizen, british citizen are not considered as an EEA family so you dont fall under that law. But i would advice you seek a proper legal advice on it.
Good luck
alf32 wrote:I am just not able to go with my husband to his country due to work and I am the sole carer to my mother. I it necessary to go with him? I will of course visit whilst he I there but it's just no possible for me to live there. Do you really think we should not apply for discretionary Leave? We have already waited nearly 3 years for a decision on his FLRM, its all so terrible upsetting
bishop007 wrote:Im sure a qualified immigration lawyer will be best to advice you on how to go about it, you might not need to go with him, but will be of a great advantage if you was there on his interview date.alf32 wrote:I am just not able to go with my husband to his country due to work and I am the sole carer to my mother. I it necessary to go with him? I will of course visit whilst he I there but it's just no possible for me to live there. Do you really think we should not apply for discretionary Leave? We have already waited nearly 3 years for a decision on his FLRM, its all so terrible upsetting
All you need is to be prepared with all the supporting documents, just try and seek legal advice on what document required, trust me it wont take long if he goes back and apply in his country.
MPH80 wrote:A discretionary leave application might take longer than the FLR(M) has ... once you factor in refusals ... appeals etc.
If you otherwise qualify - returning home and applying for a spouse application is the quickest, simplest, option.
It is not necessary for you to go with him - I think the point was to minimise your time apart.
Without wishing to sound harsh - if you can afford to go for a visit - I wonder how much day to day care your mother requires.
Being blunt - for her care requirements to be a factor in an article 8 application - you're going to need to show she requires lots of care and being able to go for a visit indicates perhaps she doesn't require that much. Can you provide more details?
Many appeals have shown that employment is, by itself, not a good enough reason to qualify under article 8 as many people, every day, move country and then find a new job and many people, every day, move countries where they don't know the language, learn and then find a job.
Remember - article 8 protects the right to family life ... it just doesn't say where that family life has to happen...
alf32 wrote:I think out best option is for him to return home for a spouse visa. My mother doesn't need 24 hour care, but takes several pills a day which I have to organise, as well as taking her to dr and hospital appointments every so often, so I would In fact be able to visit my husband for short intervals.
glory5050 wrote:alf32 wrote:I think out best option is for him to return home for a spouse visa. My mother doesn't need 24 hour care, but takes several pills a day which I have to organise, as well as taking her to dr and hospital appointments every so often, so I would In fact be able to visit my husband for short intervals.
Flr m was not the right form for the application...he could have use flr o form. Has your been with for 2 or more years?
alf32 wrote:We were advised by a money grabbing solicitor to apply for FLRM which we did on 2 separate occasions. We have been together for nearly 6 years now
alf32 wrote:Stuck for words right now.
I received an email today with regards to my husbands spouse visa application. Sheffield emailed me asking for my supporting documents to be sent as they have received my husbands application. I sent 9kg of supporting documents special delivery signed for on 2/9/13, these documents were signed for on 3/9/13, but Sheffield are saying they don't have any documents. 1 month has passed and now they inform me they don't have my documents. I don't know what to do now, I'm at a loss. How can 9kg of papers go missing??!!! When I sent the documents the address I was given was international visas and operations sheffield, but when they emailed me today they old me to send documents to Vulcurn house iron, but when we put the application in there was no mention of vulcurn house. I so hope to god they find my documents.
alf32 wrote:My husband applied for a spouse visa back in August 2013, and today I received my documents back, this included all originals and some copies but not all, I think they may not have kept all of the photocopies as they may have thought the documents were not relevant.
Does this mean they have looked at our case?
How long after receiving the documents back do you get a decission?
I would really appreciate it if anyone can answer these questions, we are both feeling so anxious now, and just want to be back with my husband
and stay on the right side of the lawvinny wrote:Be patient.
alf32 wrote:feeling so anxious right now. After apllying for a spouse visa in August, I received my documents back this week, after emailing UKBA I have been told an decision has been made and a text will be sent to my husband within a few days, does anyone have a rough idea how long this usually takes? Application was made in Lagos Nigeria.