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So what was your visa status between January 2009 and March 2010? Did you get an extension of your student visa?hikz wrote: I entered the country via student visa and went to university. It was a student visa which was valid for 12 months.I arrived on January 2008.
This might complicate things depending on the answer to the question above.hikz wrote: I sought Asylum in March 2010 and was initially refused but was accepted at a later stage via a court in January 2011.
The 10 years rule applies to all those seeking naturalization.hikz wrote:The solicitor made it clear that it was due to my CCJ or offences. I have held my indefinite leave for over a year now. I was recognised as a refugee so I do not understand where the 10 years rule come in and I have entered the UK legally.
I couldn't edit my post, so I will elaborate on this point a bit more here. The 10 year rule applies not only to entry into the UK, it also applies to the retention of legal stay while resident in the country. Periods of illegal stay as small as a single day (between applications and forgiveness periods) have caused citizenship applications to fail. There is no discretion on that. This however may not apply to you because of the Asylum system, and if your stay was legal the entire time anyway.hikz wrote: I do not understand where the 10 years rule come in and I have entered the UK legally.
Yeah if the CCJ had been for an unpaid credit card or a missed closing payment of an electric bill or something completely unrelated to traffic anything, it would look better. As it is, it has the appearance of yet another traffic 'offence' and a recent one at that. Really unfortunate there. I'm afraid I can't give much advice on this. It will require the discretion of a case worker, and I can even imagine them passing this around the office to get opinions.hikz wrote:Thanks for the reply. Both solicitors did not speak about the 10 years rule and did not seem bothered about it rather more concerned about my offence of the ccj. The traffic offences are 5 years old and I was between the age of 20 and 22 when I committed them.
It's still a bit of a mix, but in the last few years, the UK government has really cracked down on this. This is why you may very well know people who've managed some questionable situations succesfully into citizenship, and maybe even know a few people who failed to do this with siimilar circumstances. In general, periods of illegal stay of about 3 months have been forgiven by 'default' upon gaining asylum (but this is very reliant on context and nowhere written in stone that I'm aware of). Also, judges may rule that entire periods of overstay are forgiven upon successful aquirement of asylum. This seems to happen rather often from what I gather, though I admit this is outside of my field of detailed knowledge. I suspect you're situation is the latter and therefore not a concern.hikz wrote:I overstayed my visa from 2009 to 2010, so I do not also see how would that affect in my situation as I have gone through the Asylum system. I am aware of people who entered the UK illegally or overstayed but were naturalised after they received their ILR, just a year after and they were here for less than 10 years. its really confusing.
I really don't know. Assuming the illegal stay is forgiven, I don't see anything strictly barring you from eligibility. Your case isn't all that complicated, but these offences along with the recent traffic-related CCJ stand out like a sore thumb. The timespan between the last traffic offense and the present is in your favor, no doubt. But the nature of that CCJ really raises some eyebrows. Maybe somebody else can offer some quidance or experience that is useful.hikz wrote:Is it worth a try? I am planning to use the checking service provided by local authorities, would they be able to decide whether I am eligible or do they just look if the application is filled out properly?