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Once you leave the country your application / appeal is considered abandoned so is of no consequence in an out of country application. So if it is not resolved by the time you leave, it will be treated as abandoned as soon as you show up elsewhere in the out of country visa system.My questions:
a) What can I do to help ensure I will gain re-entry? Is there anything I should watch out for? Are there any documents (other than the standard required ones) that may help me to gain entry? For example, will the fact that my case is under reconsideration (should it still be under reconsideration when I leave) be a plus. Should I then document this fact and the history of my ILR application?
How is this possible? I will need the visa that accompanies the work permit right? I was told that in order to get that visa I would need to apply for it - obviously - but the way you apply is either by leaving and re-entering through entry clearance; in fact I was told this is what the rules require or failing that if for some reason the applicant can't return and apply for entry clearance he / she would need to apply for discretionary leave from within country. So if the work permit application is succesful and the ILR is refused I still need to get the right visa. Isn't that the case?Frontier Mole wrote: If your WP is granted, you would not have to make a claim for discretionary leave because it is giving you the green light to in effect to remain as you are in country. ...
For your own piece of mind do not interrelat the issues. If your ILR recon is sucessful the WP becomes immaterial. If the ILR recon fails but your WP is granted you will get to stay, which in itself strengthens a future ILR claim.