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Sorry to hear that. Pretty harsh but regrettfully things like that happen. Please advise on the exact reasons of refusal.adseeker wrote: At the end of last December, he made an in-time visa extension application and was refused. Then he went on appeal which was rejected and today his application for reconsideration of the appeal to AIT was rejected as well. He has five days to submitt application for reconsideration to Administrative Court.
Do you meet all the requirements for it? Have you considered other possibilities under other categories?1) I go back to my country and get a student visa.
Haven't heard of this before. Perhaps Chess, John, Kayalami would advise on that better.2) I go back to my country and get a independent school student visa on behalf of my daughter.
I don't think the refusals will have the fatal implications but there is a question in VAF form about this and you will have to put "yes". Besides, the refusals, specifically the IAT's (because the IAT deals with cases for settlement only) can be detrimental to the "returnability" criteria, as a part of the Immigration Rules requirements for non-settlement visa applications. So I would advise that you consider the programmes under which you could return to the UK in the Category Leading to Settlement, if it eventuates that you run out of options available to you now and have to leave the UK. Just bear that in mind.My question is: Which solution stands more chance as we have already had the record of being refused?
Nothing to stop you doing that. Quite a number of children from overseas attend boarding schools in the UK.I go back to my country and get a independent school student visa on behalf of my daughter.
adseeker wrote:We have a 11-year old daughter who has stayed here for four years and is going to start her secondary school this coming September. I can't go back to my home country for her sake.
Sorry to say none of that is a valid defence against overstaying on a visa.my daughter simply can't go back to my home country as she is already 11 years old and she doesn't speak,read or write a single word of the native language
Your daughter cannot get a student visa to study at a state school. If for an independent school, are you able to afford that, if you and your husband are living back in your country? Which incidentally is where?What I really want to find out is how much the negative effect of the refusal of my husband's visa will impose on my visa application or my daughter's?
adseeker wrote:And my daughter simply can't go back to my home country as she is already 11 years old and she doesn't speak,read or write a single word of the native language.
I have to agree with that. My step-daughter, now 11, came to the UK five years ago, aged 6. She knew very little English on arrival but is now totally fluent.I find it difficult to belive that in four years your daughter has forgotten the language she learnt as a child.