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Thank you.Lucapooka wrote:You showing more money as their sponsor is not the issue, and furthermore, I suspect that the UKBA fear an extended family application under EU rules once they arrive in the UK. They need to show their financial independence and proof of strong social and economic ties to China.
Owning an apartment and having a regular pension is fine but if they are renting an apartment and have only a meagre pension, have a daughter with a right of residence in the UK under EU rules who supports them, and have a soft option for their own residence in the UK under EU rules, it could be a tricky application and only an appeal at the FTT will overcome this.
"You intend to visit your daughter and her family in the UK for 160 days along with your spouse"..Lucapooka wrote:First you have to find out if there is, indeed, a full right of appeal. If there was nothing in your application to indicate your wife was the partner of a settled resident, there may not have been a right of appeal offered. What is the wording of the refusal notice?
If you can read my previous posts, it is a family visit.vinny wrote:If not a family visitor or the visit application was made on/after 25 June 2013, then there is only limited rights of appeal.
SerMCG wrote:Background: mother and father in law wanted to visit us for the beginning of October because we are having a child.
Reasons are several: my wife EEA2 permit has expired in May. The permanent residency application is being processed. She still has the right to live in the UK so they are making a fuss? She can work and live in the UK anyways as long as she doesn't leave the country. Also, I'm British (naturalised recently) and European with full rights to live in the UK. We both work and have full time jobs. (Shared the documents, including marriage certificates, contracts, house ownership, etc, etc.)
We invited them to stay for 5 months. They have 3000 gbp savings they can use for the trip but we also promised we will pay for everything.
They said they don't have ties in China: both retired and own their apartment.
They say in these circumstances they doubt their visit will be genuine and refused!
What's your suggestion (informations, tips, etc) for the appeal?
For me this looks ridiculous. They came here for 3 months in 2010 and everything was fine.
- Should add travelers and cheque in their names?
- Tell them my wife has the right to live and work in the UK by law so her situation is everything but uncertain? Plus I'm also inviting them so what's uncertain about me being British and European and having all the rights to live here and invite my father and mother in law?