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No it is not.paulp wrote:What I'm asking is whether a curtailment is required to invalidate a visa.VictoriaS wrote:There is no legal obligation on the sponsor to notify the Home Office at the moment. There IS a legal obligation for the non EEA nationla to leave. If she gets caught, she'll be in trouble.
Victoria
No, this person will not be liable to administrative removal.VictoriaS wrote:As in possible administrative removal and a very hard time if she ever seeks to return.
Victoria
Mr Rusty wrote: The offence under S24.i(b) of the 1971 act is failing to observe a condition of leave to enter or remain. However, Chapter 10 of the Operational Enforcement Manual on the BIA website lists those liable to administrative removal under S10(1) of the 1999 Act as (see10.3)
* Those who have gained leave to enter or remain by deception
I'd say she'd have to leave immediately. The HO won't care about employment obligations.Walthamstow wrote:That doesn't really answer the question. You've just picked up on the statement before.
Technically, if we split - the visa would be invalid, regardless of IO chasing her. It is invalid.
So, let me gve a tighter example.
We split. The IO know this. They contact her and tell her that as her visa is now invalid she must leave the country.
She has a contract with work which says she must give - lets say - 6 weeks notice.
Would she be allowed to work that 6 weeks?
Would she need to immediately stop working and then leave at the earliest opportunity?