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Having just had a look at the NHS regulations I don't think he is eligible for treatment. And as regards "marry his girlfriend who has an EU passport" he will not be allowed to marry in the UK, given that he would need a CoA ... Certificate of Approval to Marry ... and he will not get that due to his lack of proper UK immigration status.his options are either return to Albania, try to battle it out here, or marry his girlfriend who has an EU passport.
I'm not sure if the German Embassy has any jurisdiction over marriage laws in Albania. Getting the marriage recognised in Germany might be a different issue, but UK law generally recognises foreign marriage as valid provided they are valid in the country in which the marriage took place.clairey wrote:[His fiancée has contacted the German Embassy, who are insisting that both of them need an appointment at a registry office in German before they can marry in Albania.
Presumably that would be if the marriage is to be recognised (or readily recognised) in Germany. It wouldn't be a requirement for a marriage contracted in Albania to be recognised in the UK, even if one of the parties is a German national. It could conceivably be a requirement under Albanian law, of course, but that seems very unlikely (and, moreover, it also seems unlikely that people at the German embassy would be pronouncing upon, much less that they would know about, Albanian law).clairey wrote:...His fiancée has contacted the German Embassy, who are insisting that both of them need an appointment at a registry office in German before they can marry in Albania...
Actually my experience has been that no-one asks any questions when you check yourself into an NHS hospital. As I posted in another question the other day, I have been to hospital several times in London and once even spent a week in hospital recovering from a chest infection. At no stage did anyone ever ask to see any proof of my citizenship, national insurance number or anything like that. They only thing they asked me was my name and postal address.Smit wrote:My sympathies but it just shows that there is a high price to pay for your friend being an "illegal" immigrant.
If he wants treatment here in the UK, the only way I can see out would be for friends and family to raise money for him privately and try approaching "cancer" charities.
While we all have sympathy for his predicament, suggesting he is "not here illegally" because he has not been served with a deportation order is surely a matter of semantics. The fact remains that he is not authorised under the immigration laws to be in the United Kingdom, and this is "not legal" presence by any sensible definition of the term.clairey wrote:Apparently, he is not here illegally - he would only be "illegal" if he had been served with a deportation order, which he hasn't been. I don't know if this now changes things with a view to them getting married here in the UK? Does anyone know? Although that still won't get him his treatment any more quickly
Possibly, but I'm a doctor in the NHS and have never refused to treat anyone, even using expensive new drugs. I have Iraqis, Somalians, Congolese etc people on my books who breezily tell me they have no legal status in this country. I roll my eyes to the skies, but when I got into medical school, one of the first precepts of medical care I learnt was "primum non nocere" (firstly, do no harm) and by denying a sick person treatment because of their nationality, I am effectively harming them. In this man's case the longer he is not treated the more likely the cancer will end up untreatable, and how can anyone live with that?Dawie wrote:Although I'm not British, I have a very English sounding name (I'm from South Africa), English is my home language and I look Western European. I suspect that this might have something to do with no-one asking me any questions.
That's what I can't understand. It's not like he's thought "while I'm over here, I'll have my tonsils out for free. I've always been meaning to get those done..." Without treatment, he will die. Simple as that. I just hope the people refusing him have strong consciences.by denying a sick person treatment because of their nationality, I am effectively harming them. In this man's case the longer he is not treated the more likely the cancer will end up untreatable, and how can anyone live with that?
I'm not a doctor so can't claim any medical expertise, but bearing in mind the fact you mentioned chemotherapy earlier in the thread, I'm wondering if the real reason for the refusal is that such treatment may be clinically ineffective (rather than immigration status). From a quick review of the literature, chemotherapy seems not to be a preferred treatment for the majority of cases of this type of cancer.clairey wrote:Stedman, I'm pretty sure it's the hospital managers denying him treatment, not the doctors. Although the consultant's secretary is no longer returning his calls either ... Without treatment, he will die. Simple as that. I just hope the people refusing him have strong consciences.
JAJ wrote:I'm not a doctor so can't claim any medical expertise, but bearing in mind the fact you mentioned chemotherapy earlier in the thread, I'm wondering if the real reason for the refusal is that such treatment may be clinically ineffective (rather than immigration status). From a quick review of the literature, chemotherapy seems not to be a preferred treatment for the majority of cases of this type of cancer.
Technically yes, work is permitted, if a Family Member of an EEA Citizen. However there is a great problem! There is no ability to prove that ability to work to a prospective employer, and thus such employer would shy away from starting the employment.his immigration lawyer has said that he is now able to work - is this the case?
Interesting! Where on earth did they dig up that requirement? It simply does not exist! It comes down to whether he is "ordinarily resident" in the UK, and it is accepted, for example, that someone coming to the UK on a 2-year spouse visa meets that test as soon as they arrive.His hospital are refusing to see his as he "hasn't been legally resident here for 1 year".