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Your other alternative is the Surinder Singh route; this will involve moving to another EU country (or probably Poland) and making it your 'centre of life.' You could then move back to the UK and your spouse would be subject to EU immigration rules. This route will probably involve living in the other country for 6 - 12 months min.PoleCat wrote:
Ways considered and questions
A) VAF4A for my partner to join me as a fiancée of UK citizen
- Financial requirement: I am steadily employed with good earnings.
- Language requirement: my partner has a BSc degree taught in English.
- Genuine relationship: we have emails, chats, travel itineraries, pictures documenting a romantic relationship since May 2014. We are also expecting a child together.
Fine. From country of residence, ie India.
Question: Can this visa be granted before I receive my decree absolute? I can prove that my divorce proceedings are ongoing presenting letters from the solicitor; I hope for a decree nisi before the end of January 2015.
Answer: Nope. You must be free to marry on your date of application.
B) VAF5 for my partner to join me as a wife of an EEA national
- After I have my decree absolute, we can get married in a country where marrying a non-EEA citizen is not much hassle (Denmark seems promising)
Question: Will there be no problem with EEA family permit because I am also a British citizen?
Answer: You won't be allowed to do this as you are no longer seen as exercising your treaty rights... You will need to apply under UK Immigration rules.
Question: Can VAF5 be submitted from outside my partner's home country? We wish to avoid her being there in the latter half of pregnancy; it would be ideal if following our marriage she could apply whilst still inside Schengen and then join me in UK.
Damnation. I found this and got my hopes high; do you mean that practically there is no chance of the application being accepted?physicskate wrote:Answer: Nope. You must be free to marry on your date of application.PoleCat wrote:
Ways considered and questions
A) VAF4A for my partner to join me as a fiancée of UK citizen
- Financial requirement: I am steadily employed with good earnings.
- Language requirement: my partner has a BSc degree taught in English.
- Genuine relationship: we have emails, chats, travel itineraries, pictures documenting a romantic relationship since May 2014. We are also expecting a child together.
Fine. From country of residence, ie India.
Question: Can this visa be granted before I receive my decree absolute? I can prove that my divorce proceedings are ongoing presenting letters from the solicitor; I hope for a decree nisi before the end of January 2015.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... -finalisedSET1.17 What if the divorce / dissolution process is not yet finalised?
An entry clearance should not be refused for this reason alone. The ECO would normally expect to see evidence that the divorce / dissolution proceedings are well under way.
I think it requires getting my partner a >6 month Schengen visa - might be a major undertaking as well... But I will research.Your other alternative is the Surinder Singh route; this will involve moving to another EU country (or probably Poland) and making it your 'centre of life.' You could then move back to the UK and your spouse would be subject to EU immigration rules. This route will probably involve living in the other country for 6 - 12 months min.
That has not been allowed since 2001. No - you cannot enter on a visitor visa and then switch to any other.PoleCat wrote:Hi,
A question if the following plan is also feasible: wait for decree absolute, marry abroad, partner enters UK on a visitor visa, while in UK apply for FLR*? Is that possible?
Thanks to anyone who knows!
*I am mightily confused as to what would be the correct route to take and if it will result in FLR(M) or FLR(FP).
Applying for the fiancée visa is the plan. Do you know of any document that states that such application is pointless until decree absolute? The only thing I found so far is the optimistically sounding SET1.17 quoted earlier; with that in mind we intend to apply as soon as we have all the other documents, because with the baby on the way we need that visa ASAP.physicskate wrote: Once you are divorced, apply for a fiancé visa.
My partner has:31. Evidence of an academic qualification (recognised by UK NARIC to be equivalent to the standard of a Bachelor's or Master's degree or PhD in the UK) and was taught in English must be either:
(a) A certificate issued by the relevant institution confirming the award of the academic qualification showing:
(i) the applicant's name;
(ii) the title of award;
(iii) the date of award;
(iv) the name of the awarding institution; and,
(v) that the qualification was taught in English
When is your divorce due to be finalised? The concern may be that you will not be free to marry before the expiry of a fiancé visa...PoleCat wrote:Applying for the fiancée visa is the plan. Do you know of any document that states that such application is pointless until decree absolute? The only thing I found so far is the optimistically sounding SET1.17 quoted earlier; with that in mind we intend to apply as soon as we have all the other documents, because with the baby on the way we need that visa ASAP.physicskate wrote: Once you are divorced, apply for a fiancé visa.
I expect decree nisi in a few weeks. The divorce is amicable and there is nothing to suggest it will suffer any unreasonable delays.physicskate wrote: When is your divorce due to be finalised? The concern may be that you will not be free to marry before the expiry of a fiancé visa...
Thanks a lot for your answer.secret.simon wrote:I think that a NARIC letter is a good investment in this case.
Is the degree listed in the PBS calculator? If it is and the calculator gives 30 points for the degree and 10 points for the English requirements, a printout of the PBS calculator may be acceptable as proof rather than a NARIC letter.
For the PBS Calculator, choose Tier 2 > General, even though that is not the basis of your visa. It is only to generate the degree & language validation
I believe in this case that it means that the Home Office does not recognise the degree as being the equivalent of a British bachelors degree and hence that submitting only that as a proof of English requirements will fail. In such a case, I would definitely suggest getting a NARIC letter to go with the application.PoleCat wrote:The degree is listed and gets 10 points for English in the PBS calculator. I cannot see a way there for any points to be granted for the degree itself on Tier2 > General, though.
Apologies for not being clear. I meant that it seems there is no way to get 30 points for any degree when selecting Tier 2 in PBS calculator - the points can be only awarded for Sponsorship, Salary, English skills (up to 10 available) and Maintenance.secret.simon wrote:I believe in this case that it means that the Home Office does not recognise the degree as being the equivalent of a British bachelors degreePoleCat wrote:The degree is listed and gets 10 points for English in the PBS calculator. I cannot see a way there for any points to be granted for the degree itself on Tier2 > General, though.
It is I who should apologise. The PBS calculator has changed significantly since when I used it (over two years ago) and there is no section for the qualification any more.PoleCat wrote:Apologies for not being clear. I meant that it seems there is no way to get 30 points for any degree when selecting Tier 2 in PBS calculator - the points can be only awarded for Sponsorship, Salary, English skills (up to 10 available) and Maintenance.secret.simon wrote:I believe in this case that it means that the Home Office does not recognise the degree as being the equivalent of a British bachelors degreePoleCat wrote:The degree is listed and gets 10 points for English in the PBS calculator. I cannot see a way there for any points to be granted for the degree itself on Tier2 > General, though.
The degree in question is listed and gets 10 English skills points.
I mentioned the NHS issue here and here. In short, no one ever asked us to pay despite our repeated verbal enquires at the GP and the hospital. We persisted in asking and finally got an email confirmation from the local NHS trust that she owes nothing.I am satisfied you choose to have your child in the UK and that your labour therefore was not the result of an emergency. As such you are required to provide:
Evidence that you have paid the NHS fees for the child you had in the UK whilst on a visit visa or evidence that you had your child privately at your own costs.
You can send these documents at NewDelhi.VisaEvidentialFlexibilityReply@fco.gov.uk OR by fax on 24192524. Please provide us these documents on or before 02/12/2015 quote yur name, date of birth and above file reference number XXXXXX. If we do not receive these documents before the above said deadline, we will take a decision on the documents available.
Yours sincerely,
Visa Support Officer
Correspondence Unit
UK Visas and Immigration
South and South East Asia Region