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Thanks, and that's what i have mentioned in my post, I have all these documents ready to send but i am confused and think my visa could be refused since, I met my husband only for a week in person before we married. n then when he came over including the honeymoon we were together for 2 weeks. Do we have to spend sometime together in person to prove our marriage is legit? Or should I go ahead and apply for my visa.catch_hunter wrote:You have to provide your marriage photos, your relationship history which you and your husband both need to write, your husband's passport stamp proof that he entered your country before your marriage and stayed for a certain duration. In addition, if you have an option to show wedding card that would be good. You will definitely need your marriage certificate. I am sure if you provide all this, you should be fine.
You're more than right to think that way. It is true that your application may be refused because of the fear it could be a sham marriage / marriage of convenient. Lots of people have abused the system in that manner.samia12 wrote:Thanks, and that's what i have mentioned in my post, I have all these documents ready to send but i am confused and think my visa could be refused since, I met my husband only for a week in person before we married. n then when he came over including the honeymoon we were together for 2 weeks. Do we have to spend sometime together in person to prove our marriage is legit? Or should I go ahead and apply for my visa.
Thank you so much for your help. But I don't live with my husband, he lives in Ireland and I am in Pakistan at the moment. I have to send my application to the Irish embassy here in Pakistan n from there it will be sent to Ireland and its them who would approve it, embassy here would only forward it them. So how can my husband prove our relationship to them? I guess i'd just take the risk and applyIntegratedMigrant wrote:You're more than right to think that way. It is true that your application may be refused because of the fear it could be a sham marriage / marriage of convenient. Lots of people have abused the system in that manner.samia12 wrote:Thanks, and that's what i have mentioned in my post, I have all these documents ready to send but i am confused and think my visa could be refused since, I met my husband only for a week in person before we married. n then when he came over including the honeymoon we were together for 2 weeks. Do we have to spend sometime together in person to prove our marriage is legit? Or should I go ahead and apply for my visa.
It will be 50/50 in your case if you apply for visa yourself. A good advice I will give you is to get your Irish spouse and go to the embassy with him for application.
That will improve your chance greatly as they will have more trust on him than you. They may also interview him and he has to prove to the embassy by trying to convince them that he really cares and loves your dearly. On that basis the chances will increase to 90/10 (90%). That's my advice
I know what you mean but, I believe most of the decisions are made before sending your documents here to Ireland. That why your husband being there when you apply is crucial.samia12 wrote:Thank you so much for your help. But I don't live with my husband, he lives in Ireland and I am in Pakistan at the moment. I have to send my application to the Irish embassy here in Pakistan n from there it will be sent to Ireland and its them who would approve it, embassy here would only forward it them. So how can my husband prove our relationship to them? I guess i'd just take the risk and apply
Got you reported on that one. Your silly comments and childish behavior is strictly not acceptable on this Forum as far as im concern.frei wrote:Just as well integratedimmigrant wanted to pass comment for the sake of it, seriously you are just a troll and you have no knowledge/ experience of most things you talk about.
OP you are well documented, your husband coming to Pakistan will absolutely change nothing with regards your application, as the catch_hunter had said, make sure you have a copy of your husband's stamp into Pakistan and the activities that took place at the time.
Just provide any such thing as proof dating back since you met him, email exchanges and stuff like that, even if you were refused you shall win on appeal
You said that I have no knowledge/ experience of most things you talk about? How could you say such a nonsensical, stupid and ignorant thing if you don't even know me or my background?frei wrote:Nobody have a problem with you when you give accurate advice, you are not the only that help people on this forum, users have been before you and will be after you.
The problem is you give incorrect advice most of the time, you comment for the sake of it. If one do not have knowledge about a particular topic one should refrain from passing comments.
It's that simple, it isn't a rocket science I hope you understand and desist from parading thread after thread spouting nonsense.
Like I was saying before I got interrupted by a user whose specialty is to attack posters. You have greater change of your visa being successful if your Irish husband can show interest to the Irish embassy in Pakistan how much he really wants you to be in Ireland. True storysamia12 wrote:Thank you so much for your help. But I don't live with my husband, he lives in Ireland and I am in Pakistan at the moment. I have to send my application to the Irish embassy here in Pakistan n from there it will be sent to Ireland and its them who would approve it, embassy here would only forward it them. So how can my husband prove our relationship to them? I guess i'd just take the risk and apply
Posters are reminded not to trade insults. If one feels a post is incorrect, by all means refute it with appropriate references where necessary.frei wrote:Just as well integratedimmigrant wanted to pass comment for the sake of it, seriously you are just a troll and you have no knowledge/ experience of most things you talk about.
OP you are well documented, your husband coming to Pakistan will absolutely change nothing with regards your application, as the catch_hunter had said, make sure you have a copy of your husband's stamp into Pakistan and the activities that took place at the time.
Just provide any such thing as proof dating back since you met him, email exchanges and stuff like that, even if you were refused you shall win on appeal
Well said. I couldn't agree more. Thanks for thatEUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Posters are reminded not to trade insults. If one feels a post is incorrect, by all means refute it with appropriate references where necessary.frei wrote:Just as well integratedimmigrant wanted to pass comment for the sake of it, seriously you are just a troll and you have no knowledge/ experience of most things you talk about.
OP you are well documented, your husband coming to Pakistan will absolutely change nothing with regards your application, as the catch_hunter had said, make sure you have a copy of your husband's stamp into Pakistan and the activities that took place at the time.
Just provide any such thing as proof dating back since you met him, email exchanges and stuff like that, even if you were refused you shall win on appeal
I didnt have an arranged marriage. my husband is western not a pakistani living in Ireland. i have known him for an year n half. I met him in dubai in person for a week, n by the end of year we decided to get married. So i guess we would have more chance of getting the visa if they are issuing it to people who didnt have relationship history before marriag.catch_hunter wrote:Most of the marriages in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh are arranged where boy and girl meet only a few times before their marriage. In your case also you both met for a few weeks before your marriage and you both got married in a public ceremony (I hope), so this is normal in your part of the world, and the visa officials already know about this. You are not the first one who is applying for the visa - I know hundreds of people like you where the guy was working in Ireland or the UK or Europe, or USA, and went to see the girl for a week, after that they got married and the guy came over here. I even know a guy who just talked through Skype and yahoo messenger and they are happily married now and staying in Ireland. Their wife applied for the visa in their country and provided all the evidence as I mentioned above and the visa was sanctioned in a week's time. If your case is genuine you should not be scared of anything I believe - go ahead and apply for the visa. Your husband would need to show his residency proof in Ireland (along with his employer's letter and salary slips or business or anything else to show he will support you while you are dependent on him). If the embassy officials need anything else they will surely contact you.
Thanks, I was thinking that as well. I am done with printing everything out to send but still have this fear of my visa being refused. Because no matter how strong is our relationship, to them its not convincing since we only met for a week in person before marriage n then were together for 2 weeks after we got married. I thought if we spent 2 months together now, i would have more chance of getting visa. But if my husband took off 2 months from work, what would we do about the "pay slips"? They need recent pay slips for 6 months. this is the most confusing thing ever. if we could meet each other again i would go for it, but then would lose other things. or I would have to wait for 6 months again untill we have the required amount of pay slips. Seems like i have no choice.jeupsy wrote:Samia, I think the best way to improve you chances is for you 2 to meet face to face as much as possible before applying for the visa, and have every period toghether well documented.
I think if you guys can meet once more before making the application and submit the plane tickets/passport stamps/... it will improve your chances.
So if you can easily spend another holiday toghether that would help.
If this is not possible, there is not much you can do to improve them and you will have to try with what you currently have. You can't be 100% sure unfortunatly, but you have chances.
Yes I understand the frustration of having to poof you spend time toghether but not have the visa to meet :-ssamia12 wrote: if we could meet each other again i would go for it, but then would lose other things. or I would have to wait for 6 months again untill we have the required amount of pay slips. Seems like i have no choice.