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It maybe true, but home office doesn't think it will happen, and the public won't give a xxxx until it happens.Hidden dragon wrote:Rohan wrote:sowahat wrote
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Without people like us, the economy of this country will halt!
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I think everybody should sign this statement and these statements should be handed over to MP's once session of Parliament will start again.This petition is to ask the Home Office NOT TO APPLY THE 4 YRS TO 5 YRS CHANGE FOR ILR QUALIFYING PERIOD TO CURRENT WORK PERMIT/HSMP HOLDERS, who were told when they chose to enter this country that they would be qualified for ILR after 4 yrs if they satisfied all the criteria set forth. This proposed change has a number of negative effects on the practical life of people who entered under the old rules and have faithfully satisfied the stringent rules for approval of Further Leave to Remain (ability to get mortgages on residential property, children's ability to study at UK universities, etc.), but the principle involved goes far beyond the practical problems.
We are neither refugees nor asylum seekers, but business people who felt we were entering into a contract by choosing to come here under the stated conditions at the time we applied. We are shocked and dismayed that, having kept our part of the bargain, we see the more powerful party changing the rules of the game. We understand the wish to change the rules to make them more in line with European norms, and to create a more coherent long-term immigration policy; but any such changes should in fairness only apply to new applicants, people who choose to migrate to the UK knowing what the (new) rules are. Retrospective changing of the rules is unfair, in civil contracts illegal, and to our minds not in keeping with what we imagined was the British sense of fair play.
As legal skilled immigrants in the UK, we came here because we like this country and its people. Once here, we become ambassadors for the UK in our countries of origin. We work hard and want to integrate into society, but this sudden retrospective change, without anything like proper consultation, makes us have doubts about the wisdom of our choice. We are convinced that other persons having the sort of skills that the Government itself says the country needs, and especially the most qualified amongst them (who definitely have a choice as to where to go), will think twice about signing on to a programme where the rules can be changed without notice, retrospectivelyy and without appeal. To alienate us may be an acceptable side effect to a desirable policy change; to alienate thousands of potential high-quality migrants bringing badly needed entrepreneurial and other skills would seem to be bad policy indeed
tobiashomer wrote:I have tried to put this into what I imagine might be a form that would be taken seriously; I am particularly convinced that to talk about our dignity will be self-defeating, we really need to be unemotional and appeal to their own interests and perhaps some residual sense of fair play. they will not care much that we are offended!
This petition is to ask the Home Office NOT TO APPLY THE 4 YRS TO 5 YRS CHANGE FOR ILR QUALIFYING PERIOD TO CURRENT WORK PERMIT/HSMP HOLDERS, who were told when they chose to enter this country that they would be qualified for ILR after 4 yrs if they satisfied all the criteria set forth. This proposed change has a number of negative effects on the practical life of people who entered under the old rules and have faithfully satisfied the stringent rules for approval of Further Leave to Remain (ability to get mortgages on residential property, children's ability to study at UK universities, etc.), but the principle involved goes far beyond the practical problems.
We are neither refugees nor asylum seekers, but business people who felt we were entering into a contract by choosing to come here under the stated conditions at the time we applied. We are shocked and dismayed that, having kept our part of the bargain, we see the more powerful party changing the rules of the game. We understand the wish to change the rules to make them more in line with European norms, and to create a more coherent long-term immigration policy; but any such changes should in fairness only apply to new applicants, people who choose to migrate to the UK knowing what the (new) rules are. Retrospective changing of the rules is unfair, in civil contracts illegal, and to our minds not in keeping with what we imagined was the British sense of fair play.
As legal skilled immigrants in the UK, we came here because we like this country and its people. Once here, we become ambassadors for the UK in our countries of origin. We work hard and want to integrate into society, but this sudden retrospective change, without anything like proper consultation, makes us have doubts about the wisdom of our choice. We are convinced that other persons having the sort of skills that the Government itself says the country needs, and especially the most qualified amongst them (who definitely have a choice as to where to go), will think twice about signing on to a programme where the rules can be changed without notice, retrospectivelyy and without appeal. To alienate us may be an acceptable side effect to a desirable policy change; to alienate thousands of potential high-quality migrants bringing badly needed entrepreneurial and other skills would seem to be bad policy indeed.
I do think they will care if we choose to leave, at least the employers will care.tobiashomer wrote:I have tried to put this into what I imagine might be a form that would be taken seriously; I am particularly convinced that to talk about our dignity will be self-defeating, we really need to be unemotional and appeal to their own interests and perhaps some residual sense of fair play. they will not care much that we are offended!
I am sorry but NO USE TO MENTION YOUR FAITH AND RIGHTS OR GUARANTEE, THEY DON'T CARE!MENTION SOMETHING THEY DON'T WANT TO SEE!supertiger wrote: Let's forget about leaving UK for the moment, although I am seriosly considering leaving myself but it is still too early to leave. To me it is about faith - this is a very important point I mentioned to letters to my MP and Tony Blair... I may not live here permanently but I do want my rights and I belive so do u. Meanwhile, no need to threaten by our leaving, it is not a perfect world, there are always people coming no matter it is 5 years or 7, but we came at a sort of guarantee of 4 that;s what I want. anyway let;s be positive and fight for our rights. we are all skilled people so hopefully we "managed migration" find a right strategy to get what we should get...
supertiger wrote:we need a centralised strategy and core team to cascade information and progress efficiently.
timefactor wrote:much co-ordination, co-operation & interest
aj77 wrote:Still we are missing the representation from Indian community as Indian community might be as large as Chineese community is,their representation and contribution could be of great help. Any suggesstion to let them in the streamline effectively too?
rooi_ding wrote:I posted this in the South African forum http://www.greattrek.co.uk/showthread.p ... 5#post1295
1) The law can be changed by an act of parliament in fact the MP for great Grimsby Austin Mitchell has put forward EDM1912 asking that MP's vote against the changes to the Immigration Rules (HC 974). Although an EDM in itself does not bring about a change in the law it is a platform to gain support and to canvas other MP's to support them. The law you are referring to with regards to marriages was passed in parliament and was never challenged therefore it had to be legally challenged and had a positive result. Immigration law (HC974) can still be challenged in the House of Commons, I do feel however that Mr. Mitchell is a bit misguided, I believe that most people have no issue with the law change from 4 to 5 years the problem is the retrospective aspect.
2) Yes the laws were announced about a year ago but there was no consultation with businesses and with communities with regards the impact it would have, there was also no mention of the retrospective aspect, in fact the British legal system is based on not implementing retrospective laws. When we all applied for our HSMP's Work Permits and Ancestral Visa's we all were lead to believe that we would qualify for ILR after 4 years, therefore the Home Office has now gone back on its promise and are now hoping for the apathy that we are now displaying will continue and they will be able to bulldozer us into a quite little box were they can manipulate every situation.
We came to this country because we have skills and knowledge that the UK require yes we are allowed to stay here under the rules of the UK but we should not be forced into accepting rule changes that affect us in an unfair way. I am not trying to preach from a soap box but as South Africans we are so apathetic to the powers that be. How do you think we all allowed apartheid to fiesta for 60 years, without having the courage of convictions to say something, now look at the wound we have to heal. Maybe back in SA we would have been threatened with death if we said anything during the apartheid years but this is the UK there is a forum (the house of commons) were rules are presented which are either rejected or accepted.
All I am proposing is that we get off our nice padded seats and started writing to out MP’s of our constituency (yes we belong to the commonwealth and therefore can vote in local elections) they will listen because that is what politicians do and if you shout loud enough or speak to them in the right way and convince them that the retrospective rule is unfair then they will intern take our plight in the house in commons were the retrospective element cane be changed, the more MP’s we have on our side the better. There is no better time then now to get MP’s to Challenge anything that Mr. Blair and his government propose as they would all like to see the back of him.
Tomorrow I am meeting people from different nations each person has there own situation but each one wants to challenge the retrospective aspect of this law. I would therefore encourage everyone who wants the same as us to write to there MP or to email me r_j49@hotmail.com and we will help propose what you can possible write. WHAT ARE WE WAITING FOR?
If there are any South Africans who use this forum and agree with what I have just said then I would encourage you to get our fellow South Africans off their padded seats and do something............
nonothing wrote:"centralised strategy and core team / co-ordination, co-operation"
btw, i understand ST is away. TF, can you make to the meeting on sunday. if possible, can you PM Hidden dragon please?
supertiger wrote:we need a centralised strategy and core team to cascade information and progress efficiently.timefactor wrote:much co-ordination, co-operation & interest
timefactor wrote:PM'ed, not sure i'm late or not
nonothing wrote:"centralised strategy and core team / co-ordination, co-operation"
btw, i understand ST is away. TF, can you make to the meeting on sunday. if possible, can you PM Hidden dragon please?
supertiger wrote:we need a centralised strategy and core team to cascade information and progress efficiently.timefactor wrote:much co-ordination, co-operation & interest