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Hi CR001,CR001 wrote:£1000 if you do not return the BRP within 5 days. Passports seem to be taking about 2 weeks at the moment.
http://www.immigrationboards.com/britis ... 00820.html
eddybaloch wrote:Thank you very much for your responses.
The new form AN section 6.11 has a specific provision for this. I believe this that this only applies to people who have actually ticked "No" box. This way you are signing a commitment of returning BRP within 5 days. In my case, neither Home Office have communicated any desire to me in their approval letter ( which is dated 11 Jan i.e. post update on website) nor the registrar communicated any requirement to me.
Obviously this is my personal interpretation and I might be absolutely wrong.
Anyways, I will NOT be returning my BRP until I get my passport (I have 3 weeks before my travel so hopefully I'll get it in time). I will let you know if I get any fine or not.
nobody forced you to pay thousands for that cheap plastic. you had an option to leave we should learn to respect the law of the country feeding our families every days if one isn't happy, there is a flight to back home everyday.Thursday the 28th of January 2016, I take the oath or swear or whatever it is that Teresa May wants me to do. I'm taking a scissors to the ceremony with me. Why? Because immediately after the "l do" part (if ever they want me to say something like "till death do us part"), I'll cut that little piece of plastic containing an unflattering picture of me looking like the pathetic immigrant that I was considered to be before BC, put the fragments into a brown envelope, and toss it into the next post box on my way out of the ceremony. That piece of cheap plastic, for which I was made to pay thousands of pounds, is crap and must go back to where it belongs.
No disrespect zahmed05, but you've completely misunderstood my message. Neither did I indicate any intentions to disrespect the law. On the contrary, cutting the BRP to pieces and sending it back to the Home Office is the correct way, the required compliance with the law, and that is the message I'm trying to convey here. See, this means I've already "learned" to respect the law as you've suggested. I'm not sure why you've concluded that I'm not happy complying with the law here when I'm actually advocating for compliance.zahmed05 wrote:nobody forced you to pay thousands for that cheap plastic. you had an option to leave we should learn to respect the law of the country feeding our families every days if one isn't happy, there is a flight to back home everyday.Thursday the 28th of January 2016, I take the oath or swear or whatever it is that Teresa May wants me to do. I'm taking a scissors to the ceremony with me. Why? Because immediately after the "l do" part (if ever they want me to say something like "till death do us part"), I'll cut that little piece of plastic containing an unflattering picture of me looking like the pathetic immigrant that I was considered to be before BC, put the fragments into a brown envelope, and toss it into the next post box on my way out of the ceremony. That piece of cheap plastic, for which I was made to pay thousands of pounds, is crap and must go back to where it belongs.
Hilarious... nicely putScopeD wrote:Thursday the 28th of January 2016, I take the oath or swear or whatever it is that Teresa May wants me to do. I'm taking a scissors to the ceremony with me. Why? Because immediately after the "l do" part (if ever they want me to say something like "till death do us part"), I'll cut that little piece of plastic containing an unflattering picture of me looking like the pathetic immigrant that I was considered to be before BC, put the fragments into a brown envelope, and toss it into the next post box on my way out of the ceremony. That piece of cheap plastic, for which I was made to pay thousands of pounds, is crap and must go back to where it belongs.
“if you want me to respect the law, make the law respectable.” - Emmeline Pankhurstzahmed05 wrote:we should learn to respect the law of the country feeding our families every days
By all means, critically analyse and critique the law, but do it constructively and having thought through the ramifications of the alternative that you propose.saanju9 wrote:I think if no one critises the law... there wouldn't have been civilised societies like that UK.... would have been in the middle of a jungle
secret.simon wrote:By all means, critically analyse and critique the law, but do it constructively and having thought through the ramifications of the alternative that you propose.saanju9 wrote:I think if no one critises the law... there wouldn't have been civilised societies like that UK.... would have been in the middle of a jungle
Yes Sir
And however much you dislike the law, do not disrespect it. It is an expression of the feelings of the community you live in, in a codified manner.
I am not sure I can respect something if I dislike it...Saying that... Not following law, is however a different story all together... they are two different things altogether...to me atleast