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Your friend should ask his own questions!flann wrote:I am helping a friend (British Passport holder, originally from Serbia) submit a Settlement Visa for his wife (they married recently in Kosovo). His wife, from Kosovo, has a 9-year-old child from a previous marriage (divorced a number of years ago, the child is in the custody of the mother). The ex-husband (father of the 9 year old girl) is in prison in Kosovo and makes no financial contribution to the child. My friend and his new wife's intention is to apply for the settlement visa only for the wife at this stage and, in a year or so, once the wife is settled in the UK, they will apply to have the child (who, in the interim, will live with the wife's parents in Kosovo) to come and settle with her my friend and his new wife.
So, my question:
1. Is failing to declare that his wife has a child in Kosovo prejudice their ability to bring the daughter to the UK subsequently?
Terrible idea which will ultimately lead to visa being revoked for your friends wife if a subsequent application for a dependant child is made.
She is answering "No" to the question: "do you have any dependent children?"
See above- first two words
on the basis that they child is living with and will be cared for by the child's grandparents (the wife's parents). It is worth noting that their decision not to apply for and bring the child to the UK at this stage is purely for logistics reasons (and not wanting to uproot the child from school at this stage) - and not because of any issue with demonstrating sufficient financial means to care for this child (he has more than sufficient income etc. in that regard).
That is exactly what your friend should declare on the application form. He should also make an application for the child, pay in full but defer entry. This is allowed in the rules and the only way to complete the process. Without wishing to sound harsh if your friend leaves the child behind now without an application, the only way to possibly bring her to the UK in the future would be to prove the grandparents are no longer with us and the father is still incarcerated.
2. If this approach does not cause any problem, what application will they need to make in due course when they choose to bring the child to the UK to join them?
None existent.
Thanks,
Flann
Thanks. re: your statement "Your friend should ask his own questions!".....SimonS wrote:Your friend should ask his own questions!flann wrote:I am helping a friend (British Passport holder, originally from Serbia) submit a Settlement Visa for his wife (they married recently in Kosovo). His wife, from Kosovo, has a 9-year-old child from a previous marriage (divorced a number of years ago, the child is in the custody of the mother). The ex-husband (father of the 9 year old girl) is in prison in Kosovo and makes no financial contribution to the child. My friend and his new wife's intention is to apply for the settlement visa only for the wife at this stage and, in a year or so, once the wife is settled in the UK, they will apply to have the child (who, in the interim, will live with the wife's parents in Kosovo) to come and settle with her my friend and his new wife.
So, my question:
1. Is failing to declare that his wife has a child in Kosovo prejudice their ability to bring the daughter to the UK subsequently?
Terrible idea which will ultimately lead to visa being revoked for your friends wife if a subsequent application for a dependant child is made.
She is answering "No" to the question: "do you have any dependent children?"
See above- first two words
on the basis that they child is living with and will be cared for by the child's grandparents (the wife's parents). It is worth noting that their decision not to apply for and bring the child to the UK at this stage is purely for logistics reasons (and not wanting to uproot the child from school at this stage) - and not because of any issue with demonstrating sufficient financial means to care for this child (he has more than sufficient income etc. in that regard).
That is exactly what your friend should declare on the application form. He should also make an application for the child, pay in full but defer entry. This is allowed in the rules and the only way to complete the process. Without wishing to sound harsh if your friend leaves the child behind now without an application, the only way to possibly bring her to the UK in the future would be to prove the grandparents are no longer with us and the father is still incarcerated.
2. If this approach does not cause any problem, what application will they need to make in due course when they choose to bring the child to the UK to join them?
None existent.
Thanks,
Flann
My responses above in blue
I'm not an expert and only answer from my personal understanding of the rules. You should not take my advice as absolute. However, having applied for a spouse visa for my wife who has two dependant children not immediately travelling with her I think I stand on pretty solid ground.
Fair enough, my apologies, you are a very good friend. The world needs more people like you!flann wrote:Thanks. re: your statement "Your friend should ask his own questions!".....SimonS wrote:Your friend should ask his own questions!flann wrote:I am helping a friend (British Passport holder, originally from Serbia) submit a Settlement Visa for his wife (they married recently in Kosovo). His wife, from Kosovo, has a 9-year-old child from a previous marriage (divorced a number of years ago, the child is in the custody of the mother). The ex-husband (father of the 9 year old girl) is in prison in Kosovo and makes no financial contribution to the child. My friend and his new wife's intention is to apply for the settlement visa only for the wife at this stage and, in a year or so, once the wife is settled in the UK, they will apply to have the child (who, in the interim, will live with the wife's parents in Kosovo) to come and settle with her my friend and his new wife.
So, my question:
1. Is failing to declare that his wife has a child in Kosovo prejudice their ability to bring the daughter to the UK subsequently?
Terrible idea which will ultimately lead to visa being revoked for your friends wife if a subsequent application for a dependant child is made.
She is answering "No" to the question: "do you have any dependent children?"
See above- first two words
on the basis that they child is living with and will be cared for by the child's grandparents (the wife's parents). It is worth noting that their decision not to apply for and bring the child to the UK at this stage is purely for logistics reasons (and not wanting to uproot the child from school at this stage) - and not because of any issue with demonstrating sufficient financial means to care for this child (he has more than sufficient income etc. in that regard).
That is exactly what your friend should declare on the application form. He should also make an application for the child, pay in full but defer entry. This is allowed in the rules and the only way to complete the process. Without wishing to sound harsh if your friend leaves the child behind now without an application, the only way to possibly bring her to the UK in the future would be to prove the grandparents are no longer with us and the father is still incarcerated.
2. If this approach does not cause any problem, what application will they need to make in due course when they choose to bring the child to the UK to join them?
None existent.
Thanks,
Flann
My responses above in blue
I'm not an expert and only answer from my personal understanding of the rules. You should not take my advice as absolute. However, having applied for a spouse visa for my wife who has two dependant children not immediately travelling with her I think I stand on pretty solid ground.
As I expect is the case with you in the past, I've been asked by a friend who doesn't have the language skills or confidence to do this himself. Like you, I've done this before for my own family but now I'm just supporting a friend who wants to make a decision on how to proceed. As it happens, my instinct is that he should declare the fact that his wife has a daughter from a previous marriage.
Thanks again Simon for taking the time to respond and I think it is a good steer.
Please do click on the link above which I provided already a few days ago (which you might have missed).CR001 wrote:Your friend will also have to make sure the mother has official evidence of sole responsibility and permission from the father to bring the child.
The fact that the father is in jail does not change the fact that he is the child's father and might still have parental responsibility.
immigration-for-family-members/sole-res ... 13087.html