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Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator
I heard they are all now Directors of Northern Rock....SYH wrote:Also apparently that hsmpforum was a scam for money. I keep getting emails about how all the founders have changed their addresses or phone numbers in regards to getting refunds.
Incredible. I can smell those things out straight away
Good ONE!Wanderer wrote:I heard they are all now Directors of Northern Rock....SYH wrote:Also apparently that hsmpforum was a scam for money. I keep getting emails about how all the founders have changed their addresses or phone numbers in regards to getting refunds.
Incredible. I can smell those things out straight away
Siggi wrote:Yes the only sucker are those of us idiots, who trusted the BIA to honour law and not to change it in a illegal manner as they did in April 06 by moving the goal posts from 4 years to 5 years, before one could apply for ILR and then force us to pay a further £500 for that privilege.
I don't see how one can claim the changes were retrospective because they only applied to applications for ILR made going forward.vinny wrote:They do have a right to change the Immigration rules. However, 'retrospective' changes are entirely a different matter.
tobiashomer wrote:JAJ, respectfully I am astonished by your attitude. Many of us came here on the express understanding, trumpeted in Government publications, that we would qualify for ILR after 4 years. I have a lovely letter from 3 years ago granting my first 3-year extension (after one year), on Home Office letterhead, and advising me that after the three years were up I could apply for Indefinite Leave.
I cannot speak for others but I organised my life accordingly, bringing in my capital to buy a house, setting up in self-employment here, building a book of business, and paying a lot more tax than I wold have in my native USA. I take the changed policy--fully retrospective as it effectively changes the terms of a contract unilaterally--to be a betrayal of the State's side of the bargain. In many legislations it is illegal to do this; or else it is known as fait du prince and is a recognition of the ability of the sovereign to do whatever it wants, no matter how unfair, irrational and dishonest. A holdover from the Ancien Regime in France, more practiced in dictatorships or sham democracies than "civilised" countries.
It is too late for me just to pack up and leave (I am 60) but the extra year
has caused a lot f personal hardship. I will probably qualify in a few months, having been lucky; many others were less so and their affairs are n total disarray, including some who were refused a new extension and leading to at least one suicide. To apply the new rules to new applicants applying in full knowledge of the 5-year rule and generally less welcoming policy, would be normal. To apply them (and the new points system for renewal) to those who came in with "legitimate expectations" of ILR after 4 years is so totally un-British in its arbitrariness and callousness that it has taken the shine off the whole idea, especially as regards those whose interests and lives were seriously damaged, unlike (I assume) mine.
Your callow (in my humble etc.) remark must bear witness to the fact that you are both uninformed and uninvolved; but a Moderator of this forum, where so much fully justified anger and grief and nice legal argument have been expressed over the past year and a half, nonetheless? Puzzling. as they say in Turkish, sacanlarda bastirma (you can make sausages out of mice, if you have to).
JAJ, your defination of retrospective is totally different, global gypsy is bang on the point.JAJ wrote: I don't see how one can claim the changes were retrospective because they only applied to applications for ILR made going forward.
They did not revoke the ILR of anyone who already had it under the rules.
See also John's comments and additional comments.They have not always made retrospective changes. Until 31.03.03 spouse visas were issued for 1 year, and from 01.04.03 they were issued for 2 years! So during the last 9 months of 2003 and the first quarter of 2004 there were people nearing the end of their 1-year spouse visa. Could they still apply for their ILR? Or did they need to apply for a 1-year extension in the UK before being able to apply for their ILR? In fact the former .... ILR applications by holders of 1-year spouse visas were still permitted, and the change in legislation thus only affected those issued with a 2-year spouse visa as from 01.04.03.
That is how it should be done .... and indeed could have been done when the move from 4 years to 5 years was made last year regarding those having WP, HSMP or ancestry visas. But no, a retrospective change was made, forcing people to apply for 1-year extensions .... if they qualified.
The benefit will be for the 1+4s who can now apply after 4 years instead of 5 and for those who can apply earlier than 5 years (even if they had to pay an extra fee). Personally, I would be happy to pay lots of £££ to be free from having to count my days out of the UKSiggi wrote:I suppose one way or another the people effected by this change have already lost, dispite any positive out come of the JR in December.
I don't see why the U.K. should be even trying to follow an "Australian style" policy. Australia is at the moment trying to increase its population by 1-1.5m per decade by taking in a relatively high number of immigrants.gainvidya wrote: JAJ, your defination of retrospective is totally different, global gypsy is bang on the point.
UK is claiming to follow 'Australian Stlye' policy yet it is not learning from it.