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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
yeah I understand. I just hope the solicitors can sort out this mess. Im just so confused with this situation.asim72 wrote:Happy New Year.
One thing I must say that be assured that most likely be a veryyyyyyy long wait before you are able to go out of UK, with your wife for a honeymoon. Please don't be under the impression that just a marriage certificate will somehow magically solve the problem, because it won't. It seems that right now she is an illegal immigrant in UK, and does not have any special rights because of her BOC.
Reading this might give you some insight. http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=Binary
But there are lots of lovely places in UK for honeymoon.
Good Luck
As far as I am aware, there are two main differences:asim72 wrote:For (almost) all practical purposes, BOC passport is just like a foreign (non eu) passport. BOC passport is just a passport like a Chinese, Indian, Indonesian passport. The word "British" in a BOC passport means nothing.
Wouldn't it be a good start to at least find out if she is still a Malaysian citizen? If she applies for one in good faith, disclosing that she has a BOC passport? Could she get a Malaysian passport and return to Malaysia to lodge a spouse visa application?Its good you have a solicitor, and I hope you have a good solicitor. Was just trying to put it across to you, that having a solicitor does not mean he will surely be able to sort out the mess. You are dealing with UK immigration. If there is a way out, there will be a way out, otherwise you will just be wasting your time. Many a times solicitors will be able to help you with a murder charge, but not in immigration matters.
Without going into lengthy details, my personal (not legal or professional) idea based on what I know about immigration rules, and court judgements about BOC's from malaysia who claimed loss of malaysian citizenship, is that there is at best a very extremely thinnest of thin chance of her stay getting regularised based on marriage.
Described (unofficially) at:With new rules that came in July 2012, even if somehow she gets some kind of regularisation, then still getting ILR (permanent status) in UK willl at least take over a decade.