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No. I hope you get an honest solicitor who gives you a realistic assessment before he takes any money off you.nunja28 wrote: considering my circumstances do you think i have a good chance.
Mr Rusty wrote:No. I hope you get an honest solicitor who gives you a realistic assessment before he takes any money off you.nunja28 wrote: considering my circumstances do you think i have a good chance.
Siggi wrote:Nunja28,
Don't delude yourself you are in a very serious position and even with a dishonest solicitor, your chances of normalisation, given the facts you have presented are not good at all.
Your best chance would have been marriage to your British girl friend, but I suppose that avenue is closed to you now.
The other option you have is to wait it out for a few more years.
As matter of interest, what is your nationality?
Good Luck
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/polic ... les/part7/Requirements for leave to remain in the United Kingdom as a person exercising rights of access to a child resident in the United Kingdom
248A. The requirements to be met by a person seeking leave to remain in the United Kingdom to exercise access rights to a child resident in the United Kingdom are that:
(i) the applicant is the parent of a child who is resident in the United Kingdom; and
(ii) the parent or carer with whom the child permanently resides is resident in the United Kingdom; and
(iii) the applicant produces evidence that he has access rights to the child in the form of:
(a) a Residence Order or a Contact Order granted by a Court in the United Kingdom; or
(b) a certificate issued by a district judge confirming the applicant's intention to maintain contact with the child; or
(c) a statement from the child's other parent (or, if contact is supervised, from the supervisor) that the applicant is maintaining contact with the child; and
(iv) the applicant takes and intends to continue to take an active role in the child's upbringing; and
(v) the child visits or stays with the applicant on a frequent and regular basis and the applicant intends this to continue; and
(vi) the child is under the age of 18; and
(vii) the applicant has limited leave to remain in the United Kingdom as the spouse, civil partner, unmarried partner or same-sex partner of a person present and settled in the United Kingdom who is the other parent of the child; and
(viii) the applicant has not remained in breach of the immigration laws; and
(ix) there will be adequate accommodation for the applicant and any dependants without recourse to public funds in accommodation which the applicant owns or occupies exclusively; and
(x) the applicant will be able to maintain himself and any dependants adequately without recourse to public funds.
I don't think that the last statement is quite true. I thought that either the 14 or 10 year long residence rules for ILR were still applied using a caseworker's discretion.pjoshi007 wrote:Hi There,
If you were on a student visa from the begining you could have got your ILR after u completed 10 years in the country. But because that's not the case, you can apply for ILR once you have completed 14 years in the country irrespective of your status in the country (Legal or illegal).
It will help if you have a daughter and u still meet her.Even if u don't meet her for any reason or are not in good terms with her mother it won't affect your application.
It surprises me how u managed to get NI number and a driving lisence while being on visit visa?!
If you don't get caught to the immigration officers and manage to spend 14 years then no one can stop you from becoming a permanent resident.
As previously pointed out, the 14-year concession is discretionary, "no-one can stop you" is a gross over-simplification, and in 4 years time it may no longer be available to the OP.pjoshi007 wrote:Hi There,
It surprises me how u managed to get NI number and a driving lisence while being on visit visa?!
If you don't get caught to the immigration officers and manage to spend 14 years then no one can stop you from becoming a permanent resident.
not sure about the 14 years one.drjabberwocky23 wrote:
I don't think that the last statement is quite true. I thought that either the 14 or 10 year long residence rules for ILR were still applied using a caseworker's discretion.
Fair enough. But I do believe the 14 year rule is discretionary.ci07jjs wrote:not sure about the 14 years one.drjabberwocky23 wrote:
I don't think that the last statement is quite true. I thought that either the 14 or 10 year long residence rules for ILR were still applied using a caseworker's discretion.
but 10 years is not down to discretion of the caseworker. It is part of the rule - as long you have lived in the country legally for 10 years then the applicant is eligible.