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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
Thanks for replying.CR001 wrote:No, your continuous residence is broken. The rules are very clear on this point.
I first came to the UK in 2006 so i am qualifying of ILR very soon, but as you can see from my previous post that my main problem is the long gap.CR001 wrote:What is your full immigration history?
Your reason for the very long absence would have to be extremely exceptional and even then you still risk refusal for long residence ILR.
engineer.ahmded wrote:Hi Guys,
I am just wondering if any of you has been successful for ILR 10 years route with 12 month continuous gap, I know that any absent more than 6 months means the chain is broken. But I have compelling or compassionate circumstances that prevented me from coming back to the UK. And my overall absent not considering this gap is not exceeding the total 18 months.
Another thing, I had a valid visa when I left but did not apply for fresh one within 28 days of that last visa permit expired, does the within 28 days rule apply here?
Any one have experienced similar case and been successful on ILR?
Your help is highly appreciated.
Thank you.
IndianConsult wrote:engineer.ahmded wrote:Hi Guys,
I am just wondering if any of you has been successful for ILR 10 years route with 12 month continuous gap, I know that any absent more than 6 months means the chain is broken. But I have compelling or compassionate circumstances that prevented me from coming back to the UK. And my overall absent not considering this gap is not exceeding the total 18 months.
Another thing, I had a valid visa when I left but did not apply for fresh one within 28 days of that last visa permit expired, does the within 28 days rule apply here?
Any one have experienced similar case and been successful on ILR?
Your help is highly appreciated.
Thank you.
At least for the for 5 year route, Home Office guidance mentions that compelling and compassionate reasons will be considered if absences exceed the allowable limit. I have heard about some cases where they have made an allowance for long absences on these grounds.
However it is entirely up to the discretion of the case worker (or sr. case worker) to determine the circumstances were compelling and compassionate or not.
I don't think anyone would be able to give you a confirmed answer as it is discretion. I am also in similar situation. I am going to need discretion in my case.engineer.ahmded wrote:IndianConsult wrote:engineer.ahmded wrote:Hi Guys,
I am just wondering if any of you has been successful for ILR 10 years route with 12 month continuous gap, I know that any absent more than 6 months means the chain is broken. But I have compelling or compassionate circumstances that prevented me from coming back to the UK. And my overall absent not considering this gap is not exceeding the total 18 months.
Another thing, I had a valid visa when I left but did not apply for fresh one within 28 days of that last visa permit expired, does the within 28 days rule apply here?
Any one have experienced similar case and been successful on ILR?
Your help is highly appreciated.
Thank you.
At least for the for 5 year route, Home Office guidance mentions that compelling and compassionate reasons will be considered if absences exceed the allowable limit. I have heard about some cases where they have made an allowance for long absences on these grounds.
However it is entirely up to the discretion of the case worker (or sr. case worker) to determine the circumstances were compelling and compassionate or not.
Thanks for replying.
I guess there is always away as long as I provide strong reasons. So, it is mainly about my luck to have a sympathetic case worker. I know it is a long gap, from the cases you heard did they have such long gap? What are my chances of being granting ILR?
Thanks
What is your case?IndianConsult wrote:engineer.ahmded wrote:I don't think anyone would be able to give you a confirmed answer as it is discretion. I am also in similar situation. I am going to need discretion in my case.IndianConsult wrote:
Thanks for replying.
I guess there is always away as long as I provide strong reasons. So, it is mainly about my luck to have a sympathetic case worker. I know it is a long gap, from the cases you heard did they have such long gap? What are my chances of being granting ILR?
Thanks