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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
there is no such risk with FLR(M). Suggest you take the trouble to read Appendix FM of the immigration rules which is what the Home Office go by.kostikson wrote: So risk now is that even if I re-apply again they might refer back to the fact EEA PR not approved in their list as an appropriate immigration grounds to apply from within UK.
manci wrote:there is no such risk with FLR(M). Suggest you take the trouble to read Appendix FM of the immigration rules which is what the Home Office go by.kostikson wrote: So risk now is that even if I re-apply again they might refer back to the fact EEA PR not approved in their list as an appropriate immigration grounds to apply from within UK.
The choice between appeal and an FLR(M) re-application is the cost. An appeal would cost more with professional help and if successful you'll only gain a few weeks or months as far as the 5 year qualifying period is concerned.
@Obie
If the OP now follows the UK immigration route and there is an ECJ decision against the UK would there be anything preventing her to switch back to the EEA route?
I can't see any obstacle.manci wrote:
@Obie
If the OP now follows the UK immigration route and there is an ECJ decision against the UK would there be anything preventing her to switch back to the EEA route?
in which case a re-application would be a speedier and more cost effective choice.Obie wrote:In the particular circumstances of your case, i do think an oral hearing will be best.
With the threat of no in country appeal rights if refused.manci wrote:in which case a re-application would be a speedier and more cost effective choice.Obie wrote:In the particular circumstances of your case, i do think an oral hearing will be best.
yes, that is so, but I think the principles are clear and on the basis of EX.1(a) a re-application should succeed. However, even if the OP makes a mistake and it is refused, it would still be cheaper to re-re-apply than go for an oral hearing with a barrister or solicitor.Obie wrote: With the threat of no in country appeal rights if refused.
It has been announced today that the October fee hike has been reversed, so it is back tokostikson wrote: Prices went up ...
Fees
If your refusal letter is dated on or before 9 October 2016 it costs:
£80 without a hearing
£140 with a hearing
If your refusal letter is dated on or after 10 October 2016 it costs:
£490 without a hearing
£800 with a hearing
Thanks for that. I am aware of this case and a bit pissed off that my lawyer advised to go via the expensive option of being British and apply via British not the EEU route.CR001 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 21, 2017 5:06 pmThere has been a ruling on the dual EU/UK national saga.
See link below (posts by Obie and Vinny with the judgment link).
eea-route-applications/do-dual-eu-uk-ci ... l#p1561805
This one.have to wait for exactly 5 years
The lawyer is clearly wrong, the application under the UK law route is likely to fail, you need to ditch that lawyer or thing will all end in tears.kostikson wrote: ↑Tue Nov 21, 2017 5:27 pmThanks for that. I am aware of this case and a bit pissed off that my lawyer advised to go via the expensive option of being British and apply via British not the EEU route.CR001 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 21, 2017 5:06 pmThere has been a ruling on the dual EU/UK national saga.
See link below (posts by Obie and Vinny with the judgment link).
eea-route-applications/do-dual-eu-uk-ci ... l#p1561805
She will be 5 years on EEU route in Feb 2018, can we apply now or have to wait for exactly 5 years ?
It get's to a stage we are on the back seat and waiting for a decision, so unfortunately not much we can do at this stage ((Obie wrote: ↑Tue Nov 21, 2017 9:07 pmThe lawyer is clearly wrong, the application under the UK law route is likely to fail, you need to ditch that lawyer or thing will all end in tears.kostikson wrote: ↑Tue Nov 21, 2017 5:27 pmThanks for that. I am aware of this case and a bit pissed off that my lawyer advised to go via the expensive option of being British and apply via British not the EEU route.CR001 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 21, 2017 5:06 pmThere has been a ruling on the dual EU/UK national saga.
See link below (posts by Obie and Vinny with the judgment link).
eea-route-applications/do-dual-eu-uk-ci ... l#p1561805
She will be 5 years on EEU route in Feb 2018, can we apply now or have to wait for exactly 5 years ?
You need to try and implore him to update himself on a regular basis so he does not lead his client into the abyss.