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by ouflak1
Tue Aug 29, 2017 1:20 pm
Forum: General UK Immigration forum
Topic: 7 Years Child Route
Replies: 10
Views: 3241

Re: 7 Years Child Route

Then the chances of getting this visa are practically nil. From the HO's point of view, if the child has two married cohabitating parents, that is the most stable family situation the child could have. They should be able to move with their family anywhere in the world and adjust, perhaps not easily...
by ouflak1
Tue Aug 29, 2017 1:04 pm
Forum: General UK Immigration forum
Topic: 7 Years Child Route
Replies: 10
Views: 3241

Re: 7 Years Child Route

Are the mother/father of the children married, and are you all living together?
by ouflak1
Mon Aug 28, 2017 12:41 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Driving offences
Replies: 15
Views: 1493

Re: Driving offences

FPNS but not anything else. Please google FPNs and everything will be clear... I think what makky86 was referring to is the fact that the Home Office not only takes into account the severity of offences, they take into account repeated patterns as well. Even the most minor things, if they are consi...
by ouflak1
Sun Aug 20, 2017 2:16 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Registering without British parents
Replies: 5
Views: 407

Re: Registering without British parents

Without knowing your mom's friend's son details, it's impossible to comment on what status they were able to acquire and how they got it.

By definition, from the limited information you've given, it is impossible to register without atleast one parent being a citizen.
by ouflak1
Thu Aug 17, 2017 12:21 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Form MN1
Replies: 6
Views: 648

Re: Form MN1

If the father is British otherwise than by descent (which seems to be the case), then there is no need to register the child as the child is already British.
by ouflak1
Tue Aug 08, 2017 2:45 pm
Forum: Immigration for family members
Topic: FLR(FP) 7 YEARS ROUTE HOW MANY APPLICATION NEED TO FILL
Replies: 23
Views: 6634

Re: SWITCHING VISA CATEGORY

Just to elaborate a bit on the seven years child visa, the spirit of this is for a child born in the UK who has only lived in the UK and doesn''t have strong family support. Just to clarify that the 7 year FLR(FP) that the OP is talking about does not have the requirement for the child to be born i...
by ouflak1
Tue Aug 08, 2017 1:36 pm
Forum: Immigration for family members
Topic: FLR(FP) 7 YEARS ROUTE HOW MANY APPLICATION NEED TO FILL
Replies: 23
Views: 6634

Re: SWITCHING VISA CATEGORY

From what you've posted, it seems like the best option is to move back to your home country and go on with life there. That may not be what you want to hear, but if you start planning for that option now, it will be a far easier transition for you and your family. Also, it will be far cheaper and le...
by ouflak1
Thu Aug 03, 2017 1:28 pm
Forum: Indefinite Leave to Remain
Topic: ILR Refused due to gap 3 months
Replies: 4
Views: 934

Re: ILR Refused due to gap 3 months

suryapokhara wrote:... refused ILR. I know there is some kind of human right on to oppose to HO, cuz human can make mistake ....
The human right to make a mistake is not a basis on which to appeal a visa refusal.
by ouflak1
Wed Aug 02, 2017 1:02 pm
Forum: Indefinite Leave to Remain
Topic: Ilr refused
Replies: 36
Views: 8670

Re: Ilr refused

if you are active on similar forums related to tax amendments you would find that generally applicants have been successful in challenging HO's decision on 322(5) grounds for Tax amendments in JR. So it is not a bleak picture as others seem to paint. Also it is also a fact that many applicants who ...
by ouflak1
Tue Jul 18, 2017 11:56 am
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Section 1(3) for EEA unmarried parents.
Replies: 4
Views: 470

Re: Section 1(3) for EEA unmarried parents.

My family friends want to apply on form MN 1 under section 1(3) for their daughter. Father and mother of child are from Hungary and have been living in the U.K. since 2011. They are not married . Their daughter was born in 2013 and both father & mother details appear in her birth certificate. F...
by ouflak1
Thu Jul 13, 2017 12:24 pm
Forum: General UK Immigration forum
Topic: Conducting research into the experiences of foreign workers
Replies: 1
Views: 309

Re: Conducting research into the experiences of foreign work

I noticed that you used the word 'foreign'. Do you strictly mean those who do not hold British Citizenship (even as dual citizens)? There are posters on this board who have lived in the UK, and only the UK, since infancy though they were born outside the UK? Do they count? Do permanent residents cou...
by ouflak1
Wed Jul 12, 2017 6:32 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Very Nervous About Application
Replies: 12
Views: 2200

Re: Very Nervous About Application

You can pay to get a standard DBS check . It will have all of the cautions and offences. HMRC keeps an employment history, but it can be a bit dicey to get stuff from very far back. Were you working during your period of illegal stay? Aslum status may forgive the time period. I don't think it will f...
by ouflak1
Wed Jul 12, 2017 8:26 am
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Very Nervous About Application
Replies: 12
Views: 2200

Re: Very Nervous About Application

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. Yeah if the CCJ had been for an unpaid...
by ouflak1
Tue Jul 11, 2017 12:52 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Very Nervous About Application
Replies: 12
Views: 2200

Re: Very Nervous About Application

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. Pe...
by ouflak1
Tue Jul 11, 2017 12:33 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Very Nervous About Application
Replies: 12
Views: 2200

Re: Very Nervous About Application

That clears things up. 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. So what was your visa status between January 2009 and March 2010? Did you get an extension of your student visa? I sought Asylum in Mar...
by ouflak1
Mon Jul 10, 2017 1:05 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: British Passport refused for an adopted child of EEA citizen
Replies: 69
Views: 11349

Re: British Passport refused for an adopted child of EEA cit

As a matter of law, a Person's citizenship is proven by the issuance of a passport. This is not strictly true as there are people who may hold, for example, a British passport, and not be British citizens. Other countries have other laws in this regards, and passport are not an absolute 'proving' f...
by ouflak1
Thu Jul 06, 2017 12:54 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Very Nervous About Application
Replies: 12
Views: 2200

Re: Very Nervous About Application

How and when did you enter the country (month/date please)? In particular, what passport and what kind of visa? When did you declare asylum (month/date please)? You say you are stateless (and from your previous posts, that you have a travel document stating such). We get lot's of that here, and in a...
by ouflak1
Tue Jul 04, 2017 1:04 pm
Forum: Immigration for family members
Topic: Moving back to UK with girlfriend
Replies: 3
Views: 557

Re: Moving back to UK with girlfriend

As long as you can provide evidence for atleast 2 years of cohabitation effectively living as a married couple, then she can apply to be a dependent of you. You will have to meet the financial support requirements. I'm assuming she's non-EU?
by ouflak1
Sun Jul 02, 2017 3:18 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Child born in UK to Indian Parents direct citizenship
Replies: 25
Views: 32555

Re: Child born in UK to Indian Parents direct citizenship

If said child were born British... Yeah probably best to just stick with the topic of stateless children, as there are so many other possibilies deserving their own topic. It would be much simpler if the UK had a nice pure beautiful form of jus soli . There are countries that will actually penalize...
by ouflak1
Sat Jul 01, 2017 9:18 am
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Child born in UK to Indian Parents direct citizenship
Replies: 25
Views: 32555

Re: Child born in UK to Indian Parents direct citizenship

They can takeep enfor cement action against parent. How would the UK government even *know* [/b] that I've registered or not registered my child with my country's consulate? In my particular case, that is business strictly between me, my child, and the United States. And it is absolutely none of th...
by ouflak1
Fri Jun 30, 2017 11:41 am
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Child born in UK to Indian Parents direct citizenship
Replies: 25
Views: 32555

Re: Child born in UK to Indian Parents direct citizenship

Thirdly, it may be (not sure how it would play out in the current political environment) easier to rush a bill through the UK Parliament clarifying the law than to invest in international diplomatic conversations that may go nowhere. If the law were to be merely clarificatory (something on the line...
by ouflak1
Sun Jun 25, 2017 3:20 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Citizenship Revocation
Replies: 1
Views: 869

Re: Citizenship Revocation

The basic answer is yes, without regards to your specific circumstances. But it is rather uncommon. I'm afraid there is no retroactive qualification for visa categories that no longer exist. Several HSMP holders are learning that the hard way. There are cases on this forum where people 'updated' the...
by ouflak1
Sat Jun 24, 2017 10:57 am
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Child born abroad-Residency Requirement-apply with parent
Replies: 8
Views: 609

Re: Child born abroad-Residency Requirement-apply with paren

The reason why this isn't exact is because there is some discretion here with regards to a wide variety of circumstances. Generally , the older the child is, the more necessary the 2 year (atleast) requirement is. The more time the better. If the child is very young and has lived most of their life ...
by ouflak1
Fri Jun 23, 2017 1:12 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Good character based on immigration history
Replies: 7
Views: 1095

Re: Good character based on immigration history

You weren't specific about when in 2009 you got your DLR, but I believe your chances for citizenship are very good in 2019 on the same respective date, assuming you've held ILR for atleast a year by that point. I'm assuming your are a non-EEA national? I ask because you mentioned PR, which is a bit ...
by ouflak1
Thu Jun 22, 2017 12:21 pm
Forum: British Citizenship
Topic: Passport refused - uncancelled passport in maiden name
Replies: 538
Views: 133604

Re: Passport refused - uncancelled passport in maiden name

Another point - what is your view on having the previous name on the Observation Page? I think this invites discrimination based on ethnicity and gender. This would only apply to dual nationals, so is this fair? Not necessarily. In many cases, the women no longer has her former citizenship, losing ...