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DO may be invalid if it isn't in accordance with regulation 20 or Article 27, one will have to know on what basis DO was issued, if it doesn't comply then detention may be unlawful. Detention may be justified if the UKVI can prove that he met the criteria in those regulation. 21 months seems an awful lot for a person convicted of sham marriage, are you sure that was the only crime he was convicted of? Pejury and obtaining leave to remain by deception?iyomski wrote:I am a British national and married to a Nigerian we have a nine months old baby. My husband has been detained by the home office since the 7/07/2014. Let me try and give a brief details. my husband was convicted for sham marriage and served a 21 months prison sentence. he was issued a deportation order and removed from the UK in 2012. all of these happened before him and I got married last year. We've been living Spain since last July last year and he was issued with a 5 years eea family member residence card by the Spanish authorities because I was working there. On our way to the UK on the 7th he was stopped and arrested for illegal entry.
I thought the deportation order is no longer in force since hes now an eea family and member and has a card that shows that?
Any suggestions will be appreciated please
Thanks
This is not the right forum for that.iyomski wrote:I am a British national and married to a Nigerian we have a nine months old baby. My husband has been detained by the home office since the 7/07/2014. Let me try and give a brief details. my husband was convicted for sham marriage and served a 21 months prison sentence. he was issued a deportation order and removed from the UK in 2012. all of these happened before him and I got married last year. We've been living Spain since last July last year and he was issued with a 5 years eea family member residence card by the Spanish authorities because I was working there. On our way to the UK on the 7th he was stopped and arrested for illegal entry.
I thought the deportation order is no longer in force since hes now an eea family and member and has a card that shows that?
Any suggestions will be appreciated please
Thanks
Getting on the plane for somebody who would normally require a visa is the problem. If you were driving to the UK it would be somewhat more straight forward.bescotian wrote:I am a UK passport holder who has retired to Crete. My wife, who is Russian, lives with me in MY house in Agios Nikolaos..she has a Greek Residence Card.
When we last visited UK my wife had a visa, but we were told at Gatwick Airport by UKBA staff that we could apply for an EEA permit, even though I specified that I was not working in Greece and was retired. He said that the employment status did not matter.
We are going back to UK in March next year and, as the time and cost of actually trying to get a visa from Athens..yes, ATHENS, (even though the UK has a Consulate Office only 60km from my house, we both have to fly to Athens, stay overnight and fly back...€200+), we are looking the possiblity of taking all of our evidence with us to UK
On reading, "Well, after a lot of aggrivation just getting tickets, and being held onboard ship for 6 hours waiting to be landed by UKBA, my Russian wife was admitted to the UK on a code 3, with just our passports, marriage certificate and Swedish resident permits.", I wonder if this is possible?
As long as we contact the airline and tell them of "our right", is this possible?
ANYONE???