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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
Nadra issued national identity card where husband/wife name appears is not required for visa purpose. Your plan for fiancee visa can work partly due to your honest information but also keep in mind that under fiancee visa your partner will have to marry within 6 months. Since such matters in Pakistan are processed at extremely slow speed so your divorce certificate must be with you before her fiancee visa expiry to marry in UK.Faizansunny wrote: ↑Tue Aug 27, 2019 1:11 pm
My wife is also in my Nadra record as wife and am on hers as husband.
Faizansunny can't submit the fiancee visa application before his divorce from the first wife has been finalised, or it will be refused. In other words, it's not an option to simply ensure that he is legally divorced before marrying while his second wife is in the UK on a fiancee visa.seagul wrote: ↑Tue Aug 27, 2019 10:33 pmNadra issued national identity card where husband/wife name appears is not required for visa purpose. Your plan for fiancee visa can work partly due to your honest information but also keep in mind that under fiancee visa your partner will have to marry within 6 months. Since such matters in Pakistan are processed at extremely slow speed so your divorce certificate must be with you before her fiancee visa expiry to marry in UK.Faizansunny wrote: ↑Tue Aug 27, 2019 1:11 pm
My wife is also in my Nadra record as wife and am on hers as husband.
@seagul The advice above is what I was referring to, which was incorrect and could have resulted in a grave mistake.
Nothing is incorrect because maybe you are not aware about Pakistani court/divorce system. OP is already divorced and he is just waiting the full official version of divorce certificate but depending on OP's area in Pakistan he can also get instantly the confirmation of his divorce from authorities again depend on court and its area which although wont be the full version but can be or can be not accepted for visa purposes but if it gets accepted for visa purposes then later he cannot use it for giving notice to marry. As told earlier that in Pakistan the court works with the speed lower than snail and he may not get the official version of divorce certificate without which he cannot marry in UK.I hope its clear now because the i am not denying your assumption because OP is already is divorced and can apply fiancee visa.
Faizansunny wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2019 2:28 am
@seagul
i have a talaq nama on stamp paper processed while i was there with my thumb prints on it which was made a week before my 2nd marriage, still it wont b accepted bcoz final certificate is the union council one, i am not sure how strong that stamp paper is.
That was the one i was correctly referring to in my previous post. If you are not in hurry then why not you re-register your 2nd marriage in Pakistan and then straight apply spouse visa by bypassing the fiancee visa.seagul wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2019 12:48 amOP is already divorced and he is just waiting the full official version of divorce certificate but depending on OP's area in Pakistan he can also get instantly the confirmation of his divorce from authorities again depend on court and its area which although wont be the full version but can be or can be not accepted for visa purposes
In my honest opinion, very risky.
Yes I recall the member's situation. You may find the post below helpful which Adnan responded to.Faizansunny wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2019 11:47 am
Casa yes its £300 plus VAT for opinion, i m just going with it bcoz i have realised tht my lawyer doesn't know much about fiance route, also he thinks from pakistan fiance visa is impossible. Concerning that a qualified legal professional is not familiar with the fiance route and has already given poor advice
A case from back 2017 if u remember casa by the name Adnan, same case as me however he was
very positive about his lawyers opinion, he ended up applying spouse and got the visa aswell. Not sure what magical loophole his lawyer came up with
Let me know what u guys think
5. SET13.5 The Talaq divorce
Under traditional Islamic law a bare talaq divorce is deemed to have taken place when the husband pronounces three times ‘I divorce thee’. This pronouncement dissolves the marriage instantly.
However, the Muslim Family Law Ordinance 1961 (MFLO) sets out formal requirements for the recognition of full talaq divorces in all parts of Bangladesh and Pakistan except Azad Kashmir:
the husband must give notice in writing of the pronouncement of a talaq divorce to the Chairman of the Union Council of the Ward,
the husband must also give a copy of this notice to his wife.
At the end of 90 days (or at the end of the wife’s pregnancy if she is pregnant at this time) the divorce will take effect. There is provision for attempts at conciliation between the two parties during this 90 day period.
Only a talaq under the MFLO is considered to have been obtained by means of proceedings as defined under UK Acts.
If a full talaq divorce takes place in Bangladesh or Pakistan it will be recognised in the UK if the procedures laid down under the Muslim Family Laws Ordinance 1961 were complied with, and:
the husband or the wife is a Bangladeshi or Pakistani citizen;
or
he or she is habitually resident in Bangladesh or Pakistan;
or
he or she is domiciled in Bangladesh or Pakistan.
The MFLO procedures have not been formally extended to Azad Kashmir. The only form of divorce which can be recognised there is the traditional bare form. If a bare talaq divorce takes place in Azad Kashmir, it will be recognised in the UK only if:
the husband and wife are both domiciled in Azad Kashmir, and
neither partner has been habitually resident in the UK in the year immediately preceding the pronouncement of the divorce.
If a bare talaq divorce takes place elsewhere in Pakistan or Bangladesh, it will not be recognised in the UK.
OP your situation is totally different. Read my quote in previous post from official source.Faizansunny wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2019 1:57 pmCheers casa for that info,
my first marriage took place in pakistan, she was only Pakistani national with PR status in canada, i was only pakistani national with an ILR status in UK. I naturalised as btirish citizen a year after my first marriage. I never applied spouse visa for my ex wife. However she came on a visit visa to uk sponsored by my mum and me combined. She stayed a few months and returned to canada. This shouldn't effect my current situation ?
Would i also need a divorce decree from UK ? (My understanding i shouldn't have to)
I am very hopeful with this fiance route at the moment,
seagul wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2019 2:18 pm
5. SET13.5 The Talaq divorce
Under traditional Islamic law a bare talaq divorce is deemed to have taken place when the husband pronounces three times ‘I divorce thee’. This pronouncement dissolves the marriage instantly.
However, the Muslim Family Law Ordinance 1961 (MFLO) sets out formal requirements for the recognition of full talaq divorces in all parts of Bangladesh and Pakistan except Azad Kashmir:
the husband must give notice in writing of the pronouncement of a talaq divorce to the Chairman of the Union Council of the Ward,
the husband must also give a copy of this notice to his wife.
At the end of 90 days (or at the end of the wife’s pregnancy if she is pregnant at this time) the divorce will take effect. There is provision for attempts at conciliation between the two parties during this 90 day period.
Only a talaq under the MFLO is considered to have been obtained by means of proceedings as defined under UK Acts.
If a full talaq divorce takes place in Bangladesh or Pakistan it will be recognised in the UK if the procedures laid down under the Muslim Family Laws Ordinance 1961 were complied with, and:
this means my union council divorce certificate will be accepted by uk home office since it complies with family law ordinance 1961 (hence no decree of absolute from UK is required) correct me if am understanding it wrong
the husband or the wife is a Bangladeshi or Pakistani citizen;
or
he or she is habitually resident in Bangladesh or Pakistan;
or
he or she is domiciled in Bangladesh or Pakistan.
The MFLO procedures have not been formally extended to Azad Kashmir. The only form of divorce which can be recognised there is the traditional bare form. If a bare talaq divorce takes place in Azad Kashmir, it will be recognised in the UK only if:
the husband and wife are both domiciled in Azad Kashmir, and
neither partner has been habitually resident in the UK in the year immediately preceding the pronouncement of the divorce.
If a bare talaq divorce takes place elsewhere in Pakistan or Bangladesh, it will not be recognised in the UK.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... rces-set13
Yes and you wont need any UK decree absolute. Preferably the same official quote you can add in your covering letter to refresh the caseworker's knowledge about it.Faizansunny wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2019 9:40 pm
this means my union council divorce certificate will be accepted by uk home office since it complies with family law ordinance 1961 (hence no decree of absolute from UK is required) correct me if am understanding it wrong [/color][/b]
Hey Casa,Casa wrote: ↑Tue Aug 27, 2019 12:13 pmMy previous advice stands .Apply for a fiance visa and marry in the UK. You can mention the 2nd marriage under further information. I'm sure the Case Workers see this frequently.
I do know of someone who was in this position and chose to divorce the 2nd wife in Pakistan and then re-marry her. However, I'm sure you're aware of the complications and costs involved with this.
Please continue to post in your own topic instead of tagging your question onto the end of old thread which has no relevance to your application.Faizansunny wrote: ↑Tue Oct 08, 2019 4:58 amHey Casa,Casa wrote: ↑Tue Aug 27, 2019 12:13 pmMy previous advice stands .Apply for a fiance visa and marry in the UK. You can mention the 2nd marriage under further information. I'm sure the Case Workers see this frequently.
I do know of someone who was in this position and chose to divorce the 2nd wife in Pakistan and then re-marry her. However, I'm sure you're aware of the complications and costs involved with this.
Quik update and quik question
We have applied fiance, done online form paid fee, partner has been to biometrics in pakistan.
Now i will be going to vfs office to scan my documents in london. (Would i be doing biometrics too)?
My confusion is that will i still send the documents to Sheffield after vfs scanning? Or the applying process finishes there at scanning at vfs?
Would appreciate your help as always )
Some tea?? This is the users topicCasa wrote: ↑Tue Oct 08, 2019 7:58 amPlease continue to post in your own topic instead of tagging your question onto the end of old thread which has no relevance to your application.Faizansunny wrote: ↑Tue Oct 08, 2019 4:58 amHey Casa,Casa wrote: ↑Tue Aug 27, 2019 12:13 pmMy previous advice stands .Apply for a fiance visa and marry in the UK. You can mention the 2nd marriage under further information. I'm sure the Case Workers see this frequently.
I do know of someone who was in this position and chose to divorce the 2nd wife in Pakistan and then re-marry her. However, I'm sure you're aware of the complications and costs involved with this.
Quik update and quik question
We have applied fiance, done online form paid fee, partner has been to biometrics in pakistan.
Now i will be going to vfs office to scan my documents in london. (Would i be doing biometrics too)?
My confusion is that will i still send the documents to Sheffield after vfs scanning? Or the applying process finishes there at scanning at vfs?
Would appreciate your help as always )