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Thanks for pointing the difference out. Yes, I was confusing between naturalisation and ILR.djb123 wrote:You seem to think naturalisation and ILR are the same thing, they are not. You need to get ILR, then you can be naturalised.
The rules you found are for naturalisation, not for ILR. For you to get ILR as a work permit holder you need to have spent a continuous period of 5 years lawfully in the UK.
Thanks for your response.berkshire1987 wrote:
So, unless you can show your significant ties to the UK during your absence then ILR is unlikely on this occasion. You will need to wait until the end of 5 years starting entry in 2006. Provided that you continue to meet the requirements for ILR.
No, buying a house will not help and unless your wife and son remained in the UK during your absence neither will that. As stated by Paul, significant ties to the UK must be shown for the time of your absence.paulp wrote:need_a_tier1 wrote:Thanks for your response.
The best I can do at the moment is to buy a house in the UK. Also, my wife and son are with me in the UK. Will this help?
Thanks again for your response.berkshire1987 wrote: and unless your wife and son remained in the UK during your absence neither will that. As stated by Paul, significant ties to the UK must be shown for the time of your absence.
450 days ?berkshire1987 wrote:Hi,
I do not think you can apply for ILR at this point as you have been out of the UK for more than 450 days - as you have realised. However, there is an exception to the required residency period if you have been outside the UK for over 450 days. To my knowledge the exception is if you can show significant ties to the UK in the time of your absence. This would be in the form of the majority of your family and property remaining in the UK.
So, unless you can show your significant ties to the UK during your absence then ILR is unlikely on this occasion. You will need to wait until the end of 5 years starting entry in 2006. Provided that you continue to meet the requirements for ILR.
Hope this helps.
Was you salary, Tax and NI paid in the UK? I assume you were on HSMP?Thambi wrote:450 days ?
Ok may be you can help me out. I was outside UK for about 330 days but I was still working for UK company as contractor and due to business requirements I worked from there. UK company will provide a letter stating the business reason, their contact and the period of absence. Note I didn't have any ties in UK other than working for UK company projects and having a UK HSBC bank account active.
Last 2 yrs I have not gone outside UK.
Do you think there is any chance ?
Forget it you are not eligible until the fall 2011. You entered on one permit, abandoned it and returned on a second permit. Your stay was broken from the entry in 2004. That is how they will probably see it. Although you mention that you worked for a UK company while away, presumbly on the first permit. This I thought might have helped but when you say you returned on another permit, I am pretty sure they are not going for it. You can always apply, whether the HO accepts it is a completely different story. If you get a letter from the UK employer for the period away that might help but even if you shaved off those days of delay you were away one year. Does that look like significant ties to you?need_a_tier1 wrote:Thanks for pointing the difference out. Yes, I was confusing between naturalisation and ILR.djb123 wrote:You seem to think naturalisation and ILR are the same thing, they are not. You need to get ILR, then you can be naturalised.
The rules you found are for naturalisation, not for ILR. For you to get ILR as a work permit holder you need to have spent a continuous period of 5 years lawfully in the UK.
No it was Indian Salary for that durationpaulp wrote:Was you salary, Tax and NI paid in the UK? I assume you were on HSMP?Thambi wrote:450 days ?
Ok may be you can help me out. I was outside UK for about 330 days but I was still working for UK company as contractor and due to business requirements I worked from there. UK company will provide a letter stating the business reason, their contact and the period of absence. Note I didn't have any ties in UK other than working for UK company projects and having a UK HSBC bank account active.
Last 2 yrs I have not gone outside UK.
Do you think there is any chance ?