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194. Having regard to all the above considerations, the Court is not satisfied, notwithstanding their margin of appreciation, that the authorities of the respondent State, when subjecting the applicant to a three-year waiting period before he could apply for family reunification with his wife, struck a fair balance between, on the one hand, the applicant’s interest in being reunited with his wife in Denmark and, on the other, the interest of the community as a whole to control immigration with a view to protecting the economic well-being of the country, to ensuring the effective integration of those granted protection and to preserving social cohesion (see paragraph 165 above).
195. It follows that there has been a violation of Article 8 of the Convention.
My understanding is that home office caseworkers do not need to ask you to proof again how you got your pre settled status as a Zambrano carer ( how you met the eligibility and suitability at the time). They now only need to consider whether you meet the eligibility and suitability criteria from the period you were granted pre settled to the time of your application for settled status.mubashir1981 wrote: ↑Sun Jan 29, 2023 11:33 pmHi every one,
just read some new guidelines on
https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... accessible
issued on 14th Dec.
me and my wife both have pre settle as zambrano issued in july 2020 b4 this also had deritive res card.
unable to understand if this will effect us when making application for settle status. no any changes since got zambrano.
never had fm status or ever made application for Human rights.
only this doggy statement i found in new guideline.
"Applications to switch from pre-settled to settled status
Where a person with limited leave to enter or remain granted under Appendix EU (known as ‘pre-settled status’ under the EU Settlement Scheme) as a ‘person with a Zambrano right to reside’ makes a valid application under Appendix EU for indefinite leave to enter or remain (known as ‘settled status’ under the scheme) as such a person (or as a ‘person who had a derivative or Zambrano right to reside’), you do not need to revisit the basis on which that limited leave was granted, but need only consider the eligibility and suitability requirements relevant to the period since then. "
any advice?
The ECHR is now nothing like what the UK helped create over 70 years ago.marcidevpal wrote: ↑Sat Feb 04, 2023 12:14 pmAny country could just sign a treaty, and later create a law that says the opposite of what they agreed.
Without the ECHR and its counterpart UK law passed in 1998, people in Britain would find their rights to a fair trial – or freedom of religious expression – severely curtailed. It would also plonk the UK in the same category as Russia and Belarus as pariah states.
However, other officials said that even if withdrawal from the ECHR was considered, it would not happen in this parliament.
In either case, anyone who lost in the UK courts who wants to apply to the European Court of Human Rights should do so sooner, rather than later.If eventually seen as needed, it would most likely first be included as a manifesto pledge for the next election.
It''s all in the media.marcidevpal wrote: ↑Mon Feb 06, 2023 4:46 pmUntil the UK decides to leave the Council of Europe, the judges should do what the Convention asks them to do. Everyone knows the majority of British people do not agree that the United Kingdom should leave. That is why all of these moves are being done without media attention, transparency and accountability.
They know: the ECHR has been in the papers for years. Brexit seems to have been about not being controlled by the unelected (who can't get voted out by the people) and the EU being out of touch with what europeans want in their own country.By the way, the one thing that gives me hope is the fact that the UK judge's decisions to not take into account human rights, is being done without the wider public's knowledge. That strongly suggests to me the public would not agree with what is occurring today.
Ironically, the flag you have chosen for your posts, is the Australian flag. They are not part of the ECHR. Have they lost investment. They changed their laws to stop the boat people being allowed to settle in their country and already had strict immigration laws. They control their country by changing their own laws and if the votors do like what they are doing, they can vote them out. Can you imagine free speech being curbed in Australia as it has been done in EU countries by the ECHR?marcidevpal wrote: ↑Mon Feb 06, 2023 5:19 pmInvestors from the West put money into countries that uphold the ECHR, not undermine it.
https://www.politico.eu/article/human-r ... n-the-law/Europe’s human rights court struggles to lay down the law
Nearly 10,000 judgments covering 46 countries have not been implemented.
What a joke. The EU could not have been any clearer. Yet, here we are, years later, revisiting the same issue again, raised by someone for whom not a single member of the British electorate cast their vote. The public doesn't fully grasp what is going on, in my opinion.Boris Johnson is prepared to make a major compromise to secure security ties with the EU by pledging in a deal on the future relationship not to rip up the Human Rights Act.
The EU has since the start of the trade and security negotiation said that future cooperation on internal security would be conditional on a written commitment that the ECHR would continue to apply.
EU sources said a compromise was now in play under which the trade and security deal would include a commitment by the government not to “materially alter the spirit” of the Human Rights Act.
Either party would then have the right to suspend or terminate the agreement if there were serious concerns about the protection of fundamental rights and the rule of law.
A UK government spokesman said: “The UK remains committed to the ECHR – we have been clear on that time and time again, including in parliament.
“We agree that cooperation with the EU should be based on our shared values of respect for fundamental rights and for the rule of law. The UK’s approach to these issues in the context of law enforcement is based on precedent for EU-third country agreements in this area.”
The Conservative party’s 2019 election manifesto had also promised a review of the legislation. In a blogpost in 2018, the prime minister’s now chief adviser, Dominic Cummings, had written that the ECHR creates “legal problems all the time”.
But the EU’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, had publicly warned that adherence to the ECHR was a red line for Brussels.
That myth was proved wrong in the General Election. As I stated above-
They wanted Brexit. And we have to accept that now.JB007 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 07, 2023 3:57 pmAnd the UK had two votes on Brexit, the vote and then the general election, which the Coservatives based on "Get Brexit Done". Despite what the experts thought, it was a huge majority win for the Conservatives as even Labour stongholds that voted for Brexit, voted for the Conservatives (likely for the first time) in the GE.
Britain’s prime minister, Boris Johnson, secured a crushing victory in the UK’s general election as voters backed his promise to “get Brexit done” and take the country out of the European Union by 31 January next year.
Johnson’s Conservatives captured 364 of the 650 seats in the House of Commons with all bar one seat counted, a comfortable majority of 74 and the party’s best showing in a parliamentary election since Margaret Thatcher triumphed in 1987.
He addressed the nation just after 7am in London, saying Brexit was now the “irrefutable, irresistible, unarguable decision of the British people” and promising those who lent their vote to the Tories in traditional Labour areas: “I will not let you down.”
...
Labour, meanwhile, whose leader, the veteran socialist Jeremy Corbyn, had presented voters a manifesto offering a second Brexit referendum and a radical expansion of the state, was plunged into bitter recriminations after the party won just 203 seats, its worst result in 84 years.
Labour lost seats it had held for long decades in former industrial areas in the Midlands and north of the country England as voters who had overwhelmingly backed Brexit in the June 2016 referendum swung towards the Conservatives.
marcidevpal wrote: ↑Wed Feb 08, 2023 5:08 pm1.) Again, Boris Johnson did NOT receive a majority of the votes. He won significantly less than 50% of the total valid votes cast. Don't believe me? Google is your friend. Each vote represents one person. Each MP represents a geographical area. You are confusing two separate ideas. Dirt doesn't vote.
2.) A recent opinion poll that showed support for Brexit had fallen to its lowest level yet. Only 32 percent of those surveyed in the poll, by the firm YouGov, said that they thought leaving the European Union was a good idea; 56 percent said it was a mistake.
3.) The British do not owe any Brexiteer anything. Brexiteers vastly overstated the benefits. Many British feel they were 'lied' to. It is well within their power to elect politicians who will seek a closer relationship with the EU in the upcoming elections.
It's obvious that those who have ensured they have in-demand skills, will always get a visa to the country of their choice.marcidevpal wrote: ↑Wed Feb 08, 2023 5:27 pm
By the way, this practice by the UK of poaching overseas talent violates UK regulations. Leaders of developing world complained that their countries face 'brain drains' of their talented people. The UK agreed not to take those people, but according to a recent documentary, they travel to these countries anyway.
Withdrawal from the European Convention would damage Britain’s standing in the world and that human rights enforcement would start to “disintegrate” as other countries followed in its lead to walk away. He asked: “What would [withdrawal] say about the UK, the country that is proud of the fact that it crafted the instrument in the first place, that is part of the family of nations that stands up for human rights, and that around the world insists other nations comply with these standards?”
meting eligibility have certain steps which include why you have not made application under flr fp etc.Nyamebeye wrote: ↑Mon Jan 30, 2023 10:28 pmMy understanding is that home office caseworkers do not need to ask you to proof again how you got your pre settled status as a Zambrano carer ( how you met the eligibility and suitability at the time). They now only need to consider whether you meet the eligibility and suitability criteria from the period you were granted pre settled to the time of your application for settled status.mubashir1981 wrote: ↑Sun Jan 29, 2023 11:33 pmHi every one,
just read some new guidelines on
https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... accessible
issued on 14th Dec.
me and my wife both have pre settle as zambrano issued in july 2020 b4 this also had deritive res card.
unable to understand if this will effect us when making application for settle status. no any changes since got zambrano.
never had fm status or ever made application for Human rights.
only this doggy statement i found in new guideline.
"Applications to switch from pre-settled to settled status
Where a person with limited leave to enter or remain granted under Appendix EU (known as ‘pre-settled status’ under the EU Settlement Scheme) as a ‘person with a Zambrano right to reside’ makes a valid application under Appendix EU for indefinite leave to enter or remain (known as ‘settled status’ under the scheme) as such a person (or as a ‘person who had a derivative or Zambrano right to reside’), you do not need to revisit the basis on which that limited leave was granted, but need only consider the eligibility and suitability requirements relevant to the period since then. "
any advice?
For example, if you have been a Zambrano carer since Jan 2018 and was granted pre settled in Jan 2020. You are now due settled status (5 yrs in Jan 2023). They are saying they should only consider your eligibility and suitability from Jan 2020 to date, and not to start all over again from 2018.
Hope this helps.
I will be looking at the whole guidance again later today.