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Illegal entry
Posted: Thu Jun 06, 2013 10:35 pm
by rabiauk2000
I was reading this from the home office website;
This page explains what the Immigration Rules say about entry or leave to remain when a person has an adverse immigration history. This is a general ground for refusal under paragraphs 320(7B), 320(11), and 322(3).
What the rules require
The rules say you must consider refusing leave to enter or remain in the UK if a person has broken the UK’s immigration laws by having:
been an illegal entrant – 320(7B) and 320(11)
overstayed – 320(7B) and 320(11)
breached a condition attached to their leave – 320(7B), 320(11) and 322(3)
used deception in a previous application – 320(7B) and 320(11).
As I mentioned in my previous post, I entered UK illegally on 2003. I got caught while flying out after a month. After the sentence I applied for asylum, which was rejected. Then I left the UK and went to Europe. I came back on 2007 with an EEA family permit.
My question is, do I need to mention that in my application? Could that be a problem for my PR? As been illegal entrant?
Please advice.
Thank you.
Re: Illegal entry
Posted: Thu Jun 06, 2013 10:48 pm
by Amber
rabiauk2000 wrote:I was reading this from the home office website;
This page explains what the Immigration Rules say about entry or leave to remain when a person has an adverse immigration history. This is a general ground for refusal under paragraphs 320(7B), 320(11), and 322(3).
What the rules require
The rules say you must consider refusing leave to enter or remain in the UK if a person has broken the UK’s immigration laws by having:
been an illegal entrant – 320(7B) and 320(11)
overstayed – 320(7B) and 320(11)
breached a condition attached to their leave – 320(7B), 320(11) and 322(3)
used deception in a previous application – 320(7B) and 320(11).
As I mentioned in my previous post, I entered UK illegally on 2003. I got caught while flying out after a month. After the sentence I applied for asylum, which was rejected. Then I left the UK and went to Europe. I came back on 2007 with an EEA family permit.
My question is, do I need to mention that in my application? Could that be a problem for my PR? As been illegal entrant?
Please advice.
Thank you.
You're applying for permanent residence not leave to remain!
Posted: Thu Jun 06, 2013 11:03 pm
by sheraz7
If you have EEA family permit/EEA2 RC then you must have been under EEA route while being the dependent/partner of EU national. Isn't it?
Posted: Fri Jun 07, 2013 9:09 am
by rabiauk2000
sheraz7 wrote:If you have EEA family permit/EEA2 RC then you must have been under EEA route while being the dependent/partner of EU national. Isn't it?
yes thats right. EEA Routes.
but im not dependent, as I have divorced
would I be fine?
Re: Illegal entry
Posted: Fri Jun 07, 2013 9:14 am
by Ayyubi72
rabiauk2000 wrote:I was reading this from the home office website;
This page explains what the Immigration Rules say about entry or leave to remain when a person has an adverse immigration history. This is a general ground for refusal under paragraphs 320(7B), 320(11), and 322(3).
What the rules require
The rules say you must consider refusing leave to enter or remain in the UK if a person has broken the UK’s immigration laws by having:
been an illegal entrant – 320(7B) and 320(11)
overstayed – 320(7B) and 320(11)
breached a condition attached to their leave – 320(7B), 320(11) and 322(3)
used deception in a previous application – 320(7B) and 320(11).
As I mentioned in my previous post, I entered UK illegally on 2003. I got caught while flying out after a month. After the sentence I applied for asylum, which was rejected. Then I left the UK and went to Europe. I came back on 2007 with an EEA family permit.
My question is, do I need to mention that in my application? Could that be a problem for my PR? As been illegal entrant?
Please advice.
Thank you.
What you need to do is, not read irrelevant information. Whatever you have quoted above has nothing to do with you as you are not under immigration rules. You are under EEA regulations.
My advice is "stop reading information which is totally irrelevant to your case".
Posted: Fri Jun 07, 2013 9:46 am
by Amber
Posted: Fri Jun 07, 2013 9:57 am
by sheraz7
@Rabiauk2000
EEA regulations are different than uk immigration rules and totally based on relationship between EU and non-EU national and the EEA national's activities (teaty rights) from which non-EEA national extract its rights. I would recommend you to use correct forum EEA ROUTE APPLICATIONS