Post
by KayNa » Fri Apr 19, 2013 1:23 am
Please consider any replies from senior members, but I got my ILR this week and this is how I filled mine in:
1.10, 1.12
My immigration lawyer told me it's not important to fill in the HO reference, so I left it blank - didn't cause any problems for me.
BRP - if you have a biometric residence permit then you should have this number, otherwise leave it blank. I don't have one so I left it blank.
7.11
Perhaps someone else with direct experience can reply to this, but I would assume it's from the date of entry. I put 5 years. If you put less than 4 years and 11 months then according to guidelines you haven't lived in UK long enough to apply for ILR (should have been here 5 years but can apply 28 days before your visa expires)
7.12
My immigration lawyer didn't seem to think this section was that important, she read what I wrote and just said "that's fine" but focused on other sections which she felt were more crucial.
I put my country of birth, to which I no longer have any ties so I put "xxx - no ties" (where xxx = my country of birth).
Then I put the commonwealth country where I got my passport (not UK) and it's where my family lives, so I just put "Mother, Father, siblings, aunts and uncles live here" and that's all I put.
If you have family in various countries which you have close ties to then I guess you should put that down, but really how are they actually going to check any of this?
I suspect what they want to see is that you don't have ties to any countries on their watchlist, so if you put "close ties to north korea, iran and the west bank" then they might investigate that futher.
Qualification assessment
I think they just want to know that you passed. I received a bachelors degree with honours, so I just put "Honours".
If you passed and received grades of A, B, A, C etc. then put "passed with grades A, B, A, C..." etc.
As long as you have provided evidence of your graduation certificate then they probably won't care what you put in this section - as long as you passed and graduated.