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No chance, best to relocate back home if you want to help, earning cash isn't everything, or continue to earn in UK and pay for Third party support back home.HelpThisPerson wrote:Dear friends,
I got my ILR in Jan 2016. In normal circumstances this would be a reason to celebrate. As soon as I got my visa I had to rush back home to India. in a matter of this week in India, things took a major turn for worse.
My parents are alone back in India. my mother is a copd patient and her condition suddenly deteriorated. she is possibly on Spam now for rest of her life. My dad in this same time developed symptoms which I thought was a shock reaction of my mothers condition but we did some tests and assessments with a physician for him and it turns out he has parkinsons. There is no one to care for them.
I could move to India but any new job here will not allow me to earn as much as in the UK, and I need this money for the medical expenses of my parents (definitely for my mother I am still learning new things about my father's condition so I am not sure about his medical expenses in future) which will rise significantly with time. So it will be a big shock/handicap if I have to leave my UK job. In the UK if I am able to bring them, I can manage to cover their medical expenses myself with my UK job in UK which I am sure and I can provide evidences during any visa application.
I looked at the forum and internet generally and it seems visa for parents is impossible. Please can someone guide me. Should I just give a shot with dependent visa for parents and when it is rejected challenge it in court?
The difficulty is proving that you can afford to take care of your parents in the UK while at the same time being unable to afford the same level of care in India, where the cost of care is significantly lower. How would you approach that question?E-ECDR.2.4. The applicant or, if the applicant and their partner are the sponsor’s parents or grandparents, the applicant’s partner, must as a result of age, illness or disability require long-term personal care to perform everyday tasks.
E-ECDR.2.5. The applicant, or if the applicant and their partner are the sponsor’s parents or grandparents, the applicant’s partner, must be unable, even with the practical and financial help of the sponsor, to obtain the required level of care in the country where they are living, because -
(a) it is not available and there is no person in that country who can reasonably provide it; or;
(b) it is not affordable.
E-ECDR.3.1. The applicant must provide evidence that they can be adequately maintained, accommodated and cared for in the UK by the sponsor without recourse to public funds. This is detailed in Appendix FM-SE.
Why not?HelpThisPerson wrote:Hello Secret Simon, Wanderer thanks for your replies..
Secret Simon the abstract you highlighted actually seems to give me hope.
I am thinking of 2.5 (a) rather than 2.5(b)... 2.5(a) talks about level of care and 2.5(b) talks about cost of care. A non-family member cannot give same quality (level of care) and love required for a person with Parkinsons.
I would interpret it more critically. I doubt the Home Office would evaluate "the required level of care" in emotional terms. They would interpret the terms in clinical terms. Is the medical treatment for the relevant medical issues available in India? Is personal care (in terms of washing, bathing and dressing) available in India? And crucially, is it more affordable in India than in the UK? If the answer to all these questions is yes, I think your parents have a very slim chance of getting ADR visas.secret.simon wrote:to obtain the required level of care in the country where they are living, because -
(a) it is not available and there is no person in that country who can reasonably provide it; or;
By all means, give it a shot. Just be aware of the costs, both financially and emotionally.HelpThisPerson wrote:Maybe I should give it a shot (?)
It may be possible to pay directly into that person's bank account. Alternatively an NRE account could be set up with the carer having the power of attorney at the Indian end.HelpThisPerson wrote:1>> if I hire someone to look after my parents, that person has to be paid. Though money is not the issue, even if I transfer money to India my father does not have the capability due to his condition now to go bank/ATM and take it out and make right amount of payments and my mother cannot go out of the house as well. (maybe not a strong argument)
True, but I doubt the Home Office is being to be bothered by the mechanism of feedback. The point is,the care is available and affordable. Do your parents have any relatives (including those on your wife's side) that can pop by for a cup of tea and to keep a check, say every two weeks to a month?HelpThisPerson wrote:2>> My parents will not be able to give reliable feedback if the carer is doing the work correctly because for my father his condition does not give him the capability to evaluate the carer and my mother is too weak to talk I cannot evaluate that sitting far away in the UK. If the carer is not doing the job correctly, this may put my parents' life at risk.(this I think is a strong argument)
If your mother requires a continuous supply of Spam, I presume that you already have a system in place to ensure that it works. Why can it not continue?HelpThisPerson wrote:3>> My mother requires continous Spam. If there is a breakdown of Spam machine she will need quick support and unpredictable monetary help with repairs for e.g. A carer will not put in his own money and time may be crucial here.