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The country is Cameroon/Cameroun, not Cameroon's...candylove wrote:My husband is from Cameroon’s, came to UK in Sept 2000, claimed asylum, which was refused in March 2004.
We got married in May 2004, and submitted a spouse application.
3.5 years on still have not heard anything (other than the standard letters from HO) we really need to get it sorted as starting a family next year.
We are thinking of withdrawing our application from HO and going to Cameroon’s to apply from there – looking on this board it seems like a good option. However we have heard some stories that other people have done that and they have been waiting there for over 2 years and still not given an answer! And some cases are simply denied just because they had overstayed prior to marriage app.
We are VERY confused about what to do now! As dont want to take the risk and end up being seperated!
Does anybody have any advice or experience of applying for spouse visa from Cameroon’s/Africa? What is the success rate? How long do the applications from country of residence take to go through?
I have put together an extensive evidence folder to prove our relationship, we have our own house and both work full time etc.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated as we need to make a decision ASAP and don’t know what to do for the best. :-/
AV jones thank you for your advice - i agree that we really do need a solicitor. We did use a solicitor when we initally made our spouse visa application, however he was very unhelpful and has done absolutly nothing for our case other than demand more money even though we have paid him £800 just for sending the app to HO with one covering letter!!avjones wrote:No, they won't care about those facts.
Normally, the answer is that you can't make the application in country, that you must go home and apply from there. I must stress that this is the usual legal answer.
BUT - there are two things here which help your case. The first is the age your husband was when he arrived in the UK. The second is the delay on the Home Office's part in deciding hte application.
It would be a fight, and a tough fight, to win this one in-country. But it's not hopeless.
You need proper professional advice from a solicitor in this area who knows what he's doing.