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That was the best thing to do as always, Honesty is the best policy and ECO expect that from an applicant especially if he/she already lived in UK.when he saw that the lady had the files with her he straight away told everything
I think its a good sign. Hopefully he will get his passport back with his shiny UK visa in it.he had a phone call and that he was told to bring his passport with him this monday at 3pm.
Just curious. Why didn't he submit his passport with his application?romanempire wrote:...We applied for a visa and I went back to the UK. We applied end of august....
...however today my husband calls me from albania to tell me that he had a phone call and that he was told to bring his passport with him this monday at 3pm....
When he used the other name, did he also say he was from somewhere else, say Kosovo, and give a different date of birth, perhaps making him under 18 when he wasn't?my husband in his application did not mention anything about his former status as a failed asylum seeker in the UK. When he had the interview, he saw all the files baout his other name he was using in the UK
romanempire wrote:thanks sky, well I think this is going to be my next step, a nice person so supportive has also suggested that I get in touch with Victoria I sent her an email today and hope she will get back to me
To answer paper's questions: I have a great a job in the UK that is why I was given a resident permit and I am also doing my Phd in London which is sponsored for me so I reckon it is not ideal for me to go to Albania. He did not have the ban though, he did not lie about the kosovan identity he had in the UK, and they mentioned on the refusal letter that they appreciated the fact that he mentioned evrything about his failed asylum in his interview. th egrounds of refusal are that he should have left the UK 2005 when he was refused asylum.
Read your other posts.Frontier Mole wrote:They are using the significantly contrived to frustrate immigration process part of the new rules. As I said he was faced with a double edged sword, he could not win no matter what he did.
They have been somewhat forgiving on one hand and not gone for the deception which they could have regardless on him telling the truth or not. But they have ensured that the overall outcome remains the same with the significantly contrived etc as this is a nightmare to put up a defence against. His own history can not be rewritten and the PO will go for the deception employed in the asylum claim at the appeal, regardless of what the refusal says.
Are you applying for a spouse visa or a dependent visa?
Being on a WP would suggest a dependent visa.
The other option is of course to return to your own country to live.
I struggle to see how you can win an appeal given the circumstances but perhaps with profesional advice there may be a way to try.