Hello everyone. Let me explain my situation.
I am double national Uruguayan/Italian student. I have won a Chevening scholarship to study at London in 2018-2019 academic year. My current partner is from Argentina and moved to my country to live with me. We lived together for more than two years and I want her to come with me, as she has no one else in her life. So we applied for an EEA family permit. The refusal states the following:
On your application you state that you have been in a relationship since 03 July 2015. As
evidence of your relationship you have provided photographs and a cohabitation statement.
However, this evidence alone is insufficient in demonstrating that you are in a genuine and
subsisting relationship akin to marriage.
This is because you have provided no further evidence of your relationship in the form of
cohabitation or joint financial commitments, for example. Whilst it is noted that you have
provided a cohabitation statement document, without further corroborating evidence in the form
of joint tenancy/rental agreements and utility bills addressed to you and your sponsor jointly, this
document alone is insufficient in evidencing your cohabitation as it is a document produced by
information provided the applicant as opposed to enquiries by independent officials. Given that
you state you have been in a relationship for over three years I would expect a couple in a
genuine and subsisting relationship akin to marriage to be able to document this.
In light of all of the above, this casts doubt upon your relationship as claimed.
The thing is the photographs and the cohabitation statement was not the only documents we provided. We did provide utility bills addressed to my name and to her (separately as utility bills jointly are not used in my country) from 2016 and from 2018 and I also provided a document from my accountant that we have joint investments and savings. We provided both our bank statements.
We have tickets to travel on the 18th because my courses are about to start, so unfortunately we don't have time to do another application. I have collected more evidence of our relationship including all the utility bills from the period 2016-2017-2018, also a letter from my parents giving faith to our relationship and testifying that we also lived with them for a period of time when she first moved to Uruguay. I also have a letter from the British embassy in our country saying I won the scholarship and I intend to travel with my partner and she's been participating with me on Chevening events.
Staying here and doing another application is not our first possibility because she has to travel to another country to do so, and also the tickets are non refundable so we are taking the risk.
The problem is, should we aim for an EEA family member stamp at the border with all the extra documents or should we aim for a visitor visa, saying that as her EEA permit was denied she wants to join me for as much as she is allowed by the government. Both options has pros, cons and risks. The best would be to get the EEA stamp but that would mean overturning an already made decision from another officer. On the other side the visitor visa would only let her stay for maximum 6 months but the officer at the border might doubt that she won't be staying longer.
Can anyone assist me in what to do, and what red flags should I avoid when we're at immigration control?
Thanks a lot
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