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You have not done enough to prove partner is an unmarried partner in a durable relationship with you that is akin to marriage.Junior15 wrote:Thanks for your answer.
1) for my residence card i sent all my P60 from 2010, letter from work which confirm my employment, letter from university, student loan letters and private insurance.
2) He has been working with an agency for many years, they used to pay him by cheque and then he used to go to the bank to collect the money. The agency knew about his status, but they still gave him jobs. He worked even for BHS and NHS. A couple of years ago the agency went in bankrupt.
They have not ask us to provide DNA test, we would not have a problem about it.
Regarding the proves i have sent, they should consider the letters at the same address and post card. At least they could consider the baby and he should have rights as a dad and partner.
What do you suggest? Still wait for the appeal, or (as suggested from some lawyer we have seen), go either in my or his country, get married and "try" to come back here?... (very risky...)
Many thanks.
You will face the consequences of the illegal working at a later date if partner stays in UK.Junior15 wrote:Thank you noajthan.
In the refusal letter, the reason is because the proves we have sent are not enough to consider a durable relationship, there is no mention about his illegal employment during 10 years. We really do not know what to send then. We lived together since 2011 and, not necessarily all couples in the world have joint bank account or bills.
Also no, we cannot get married because they ask him a passport, which is with the HO and we don't know how to get it back.
How long it will take for this bloody tribunal to give us an appointment???
Is this country allowed to retain someone's passport depriving him to have an identity?
Although he worked as an overstaying, they were lawful employments and he payed taxes on it, what about this?
Immigration officials may wonder why any responsible person of good character in such a self described miserable situation would think it's a good idea to pop out another baby...Junior15 wrote: Most important: we had a baby in 2015 and another will be due in few months.
...
He's unemployed from 3 years, so i pay all bills and everything, and our life is extremely miserable.
Are you sure about this? As I understand it, the rules regarding marriage for non-EEA citizens are uniform across the UK.Mumu1906 wrote:For your marriage your husband needs his passport in England.
In Scotland they just ask for a birth certificate.
You're talking to the wrong kind of 'lawyers'.Junior15 wrote:Few lawyers told us if we go out of the country to get married they will make it difficult or impossible for him to come back, even though he will be a spouse of EU citizen, that's mean, he can even wait 5 or more years before to gen in the country, what do you think?
+1 noajthannoajthan wrote:You're talking to the wrong kind of 'lawyers'.Junior15 wrote:Few lawyers told us if we go out of the country to get married they will make it difficult or impossible for him to come back, even though he will be a spouse of EU citizen, that's mean, he can even wait 5 or more years before to gen in the country, what do you think?
noajthan wrote:Your best bet may be to leave, marry abroad;
partner can then apply for a FP to come back into UK as the spouse of a Union citizen and regularise himself in that way.
Hubby may apply for an optional RC as a direct family member.
Obviously if Brexit stays on the rails there is no time to acquire permanent residence but it is what it is and you are where you are.
FLR(FP) under the parent route doesn't apply as the OP and their partner are not living separately.joolze wrote:Junior,
IMHO your best bet is to get your kids British Passport and thereafter
download the FLR (FP) form to apply for the FAMILY LIFE AS A PARENT,
10 Year route ('cause of the immigration breach) for your partner.
You could either support her or let her do it on her own.
They could, as even the HO has expressed doubt on their association/relationship, its up to them how they present their caseFLR(FP) under the parent route doesn't apply as the OP and their partner are not living separately.
With OP having gone as far as filing an appeal at tribunal to make the case for a relationship, HO would obviously smell a rat if an application based on separate lives suddenly materialised.joolze wrote:They could, as even the HO has expressed doubt on their association/relationship, its up to them how they present their caseFLR(FP) under the parent route doesn't apply as the OP and their partner are not living separately.