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OPs first wife was an EU citizen. OP obtained PR in Feb 2014, currently awaiting naturalisation outcome.secret.simon wrote:I agree with WR1. As you were still married (you are only considered divorced after the decree absolute is issued) to your first wife when you underwent the second marriage, the second marriage may be considered either bigamous (a criminal offence) or void (therefore you are not actually married to the person you think is your second wife) or both.
It is possible that the situation could be remedied by remarrying your current wife before applying for a spouse visa.
I could be wrong on this, but I believe immigration law in the UK would look at the law of your domicile (where you come from) and if different, where you got married (both first and second marriages). Can you fill us in on those details to help us better advise you?
secret.simon wrote:I agree with WR1. As you were still married (you are only considered divorced after the decree absolute is issued) to your first wife when you underwent the second marriage, the second marriage may be considered either bigamous (a criminal offence) or void (therefore you are not actually married to the person you think is your second wife) or both.
It is possible that the situation could be remedied by remarrying your current wife before applying for a spouse visa.
I could be wrong on this, but I believe immigration law in the UK would look at the law of your domicile (where you come from) and if different, where you got married (both first and second marriages). Can you fill us in on those details to help us better advise you?
This may make it even worse, as it sounds to me as if you contracted a second marriage while knowing that you have a valid first marriage. You would have only known that the divorce was final when you arrived back in the UK.Stars07 wrote:I married in Pakistan for 2nd time ... at time of decreee absoulte issued i was in pakistan ....and when back from pakistan i found it in my post .....
Incorrect. He contracted his second marriage while he was not free to marry, according to UK law. Therefore the second marriage will not be accepted by the UKV&I as the basis of a spouse visa.adnan111 wrote:once you get your divorce in UK your marriage in Pakistan will be accepted here even if it took place before the divorce here
I have been legally advised otherwise. UK has to accept a legally valid marriage which is recognised by the country where it took place. However the recognition only takes place after the divorce here.secret.simon wrote:Incorrect. He contracted his second marriage while he was not free to marry, according to UK law. Therefore it will not be accepted by the UKV&I as the basis of a spouse visa.adnan111 wrote:once you get your divorce in UK your marriage in Pakistan will be accepted here even if it took place before the divorce here
There is no legal compulsion to recognise marriages from other countries. I would state the rule above as "the UK generally accepts...". The UK does not accept polygamous marriages even when all of them are contracted in and recognised by Saudi Arabia, for instance. Conversely, Saudi Arabia (or Pakistan, for that matter) does not accept gay marriages contracted in the UK. It is a broad principle of international law that countries give full faith and credit (in the words of the US Constitution) to legal acts of other countries, but there is no legal compulsion.adnan111 wrote:UK has to accept a legally valid marriage which is recognised by the country where it took place.
Nothing unusual there Amber.Amber wrote:OP gained PR and then several months later divorces and remarries in Pakistan. Was this a sham marriage?
Seems like it was well arranged in advance in Pakistan. Casa, clearly the OP doesn't like your answer, despite it being sound advice.