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shalu25 wrote:Hi,
The bank statements were only till the time we lived together which was a year before the absolute decree was issued.
I had a permanent residency card from Oct 07 till October 2012. I got seperated in November of 2009 and then divorced in Dec 2010. In January 2011, I applied for the retaining of my residence card. In March this year, I got the permanent residence for the next 5 years till 2016 with a letter which followed later as mentioned above that said I retain my rights to stay.
I believe I will be able to apply for ILR after my 5 years of stay here although I am yet to confirm that.
Please feel free to ask anything else you want to.
Sorry bobobo, that is wrong.bobobo wrote:You have not received "permanent residence" rather just a Family Permit for the next 5 years.
Not that this should interfere with your case, but there are some interesting options for divorced spouses to get their information about their EU spouse or to have the UKBA get the information themselves:Obie wrote:A friend of my is leading a test case going on at the upper tribunal on the unreasonableness of requiring the estranged spouse of EEA NATIONAl to provide proof that up to the time of the divorce the EEA NATIONAL was a qualified. The Upper Tribunal is seeking to make a reference to the ECJ, but the HO wants to concede as they know they will loose and a precedent will be established.
Obie wrote:This case is centred around the legality of asking a divorced couple to provide evidence that their spouse was working prior to divorce. In most cases it will be couples in a relationship of convenience, that may be able to meet this unreasonable requirement with little ease. The reason is that there is great degree of animosity between divorced couples in a majority of cases.
I am aware of the case you mentioned, but in that case, the burden was not entirely left with the Home Office to discharge. It was said that, the appealant could summon their ex to court. I am sure you will appreciate that in most cases this will be overshadowed with enormous difficulties.
It is not my case by the way.
There amicable divorces around, and there are also a lot of unamicable ones. For amicable ones, it should be pretty easy to get together the documentation. For unamicable ones, it is very difficult (unless you went copying all your spouse's documentation when you notice the relationship going bad).mcovet wrote:You meant sham marriage and not one of convenience. Confusing terms mate. Though not as many people separate acrimoniously as you suggest. There are amicable divorces around, especially where the favour of providing the docs lies with the party guilty of the marriage breakdown, this help being viewed as some kind of repentance.
I don't think you are sorry for stereotyping. I think you are thriving on it!mcovet wrote:You also should side with UKBA here as if it accepted unproven submission by non-eea it would leave the door opem exactly for sham marriages where parties dont even see each other and most of the tine eea is long gone back to eastern europe (sorry for stereotyping).
Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:shalu25,
What exactly does it say on the vignette that you have received from UKBA?
Sorry bobobo, that is wrong.bobobo wrote:You have not received "permanent residence" rather just a Family Permit for the next 5 years.
The normal progression for a non-EU family member is as follows...
First they get a Family Permit, which is an initial entry visa that is valid for a maximum of 6 months. Then the family member gets a Residence Card valid for a maximum of 5 years. Then the family member gets a Permanent Residence Card valid for 10 years.