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Thanks for the information. The absence was due to emergency. My wife has to undergo complicated pregnancy and I have to take care of her. I have got the proof for the emergency. Please advise what could be the chances of getting ILR.sushdmehta wrote:A single absence of more than 90 days, IMHO, would have reset the ILR clock (to 0).
Was the absence work related?
regards
Many thanks for immediate inputs. Actually my wife had abortion and NHS stated that there was a problem with baby in UK and we went to India for her pregnancy for next baby and doctors in India advised that my wife needs complete bed rest and they have issued a letter stating the reason. Also I went on project transfer to India through my IT company and I can get the letter from my organization if it helps. Please advise.sushdmehta wrote:Subject to caseworker discretion, depending on the evidence(s) you submit to prove that your absence was a due to compelling and/or compassionate reasons and that there was no one else other than you to take care of your wife during that time.
Caseworker may question - why did your wife opt for delivery outside the UK when, in case of emergency, she would be depending on you for care and support?
IMHO ....
regards
what do you mean problem with baby? if there are complications NHS is mroe than capable to sort out medical problems. Are you saying NHS refused treatment? do you have any proof of this? If it was a choice due to convinience then its a problem if it was forced on you its a different story but i dont think NHS would tell that...GIRIDHAR wrote:Many thanks for immediate inputs. Actually my wife had abortion and NHS stated that there was a problem with baby in UKsushdmehta wrote:Subject to caseworker discretion, depending on the evidence(s) you submit to prove that your absence was a due to compelling and/or compassionate reasons and that there was no one else other than you to take care of your wife during that time.
Caseworker may question - why did your wife opt for delivery outside the UK when, in case of emergency, she would be depending on you for care and support?
IMHO ....
regards
in addition to what @sushdmehta said.xyz123 wrote:what do you mean problem with baby? if there are complications NHS is mroe than capable to sort out medical problems. Are you saying NHS refused treatment? do you have any proof of this? If it was a choice due to convinience then its a problem if it was forced on you its a different story but i dont think NHS would tell that...GIRIDHAR wrote:Many thanks for immediate inputs. Actually my wife had abortion and NHS stated that there was a problem with baby in UKsushdmehta wrote:Subject to caseworker discretion, depending on the evidence(s) you submit to prove that your absence was a due to compelling and/or compassionate reasons and that there was no one else other than you to take care of your wife during that time.
Caseworker may question - why did your wife opt for delivery outside the UK when, in case of emergency, she would be depending on you for care and support?
IMHO ....
regards