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Has your husband arrived in this country legally or illegally?jannahjewel wrote: There was a delay (IND’s fault) in his screening and interviewing process, and therefore my husband was able to mention our marriage in his SEF’s (statement of evidence form’s,) and the marriage application was submitted at the same time as the SEF’s. Our solicitor feels that this is beneficial to us, as the Home Office now have to consider both applications at the same time.
Forget asylum - use Spouse only. Simply cancel the asylum application - there is no point of it at all anymore. Also there is no point of confusing the IND, the more you make your case complex the more years it will take for them to decide it.jannahjewel wrote: My husband now has his asylum interview next week and we’re looking for tactics; does he focus mainly on his asylum case or his marriage case at the interview, or both?
No. There is ONE STOP PROCEDURE in place - ONE applicaion, ONE decision, ONE appeal. There should be only ONE application and this is the SPOUSE application.jannahjewel wrote: Is it correct to assume that the Home Office will take everything into account at once (both asylum and marriage) or will they do it separately?
They may refuse either. But in SPOUSE application he will have much stronger grounds for appeal (Human Rights Appeal). However, he can still appeal on Human Rights even in case of asylum application being unsuccessful.jannahjewel wrote: I’m aware that most Kurdish applications are being refused; so I’m quite expecting the Home Office to refuse his asylum application just so that they can then refused our marriage application
That's excellent and will all be taken to your advantage. Means that you will be able to accommodate him, support him without public funds. Your child would make his SPOUSE application case even stronger.jannahjewel wrote: However, do we have a strong marriage application?
· I own my own 3 bedroom house
· I’m currently three month’s pregnant (first child) by my husband (Mashallah!)
· I work full time earning £22,000 for the Local Council
· We have plenty of evidence that our relationship is genuine from reliable, well-qualified sources, including both my parents, my manager, teachers, etc.
They can try to do whatever they want - can arrest him and put him in detention even with appeal pending (those are not people but animals) BUT they will not be able to split you up because they will HAVE to abide by Human Rights Law. You have to have a Human Rights solicitor who will be looking after your case all the time. Your husband MUST be fully aware of this legislation and if they try to arrest him though I doubt they will he must immediately claim his right to remain with you, as his wife. Your solicitor should instruct your husband exactly how to deal with Immigration Service in case of detention, if the worse comes to worst. The solicitor should also be fully knowledgeable of how to bail and get your husband released.jannahjewel wrote: I think that the Home Office will try and return by husband to Iraq to apply as a spouse – but this is extremely difficult as there are currently no passport facilities or British Embassy in Iraq. Is it not disproportionate to send my husband back to Iraq when I need him for emotional support during my first pregnancy? (my family all live at least an hour away.)
There is no question of deportation. Deportations are now only carried out for criminal offences.jannahjewel wrote: There has been no appeals or anything at this stage - as our cases haven't even been considered. (It's better that we married BEFORE he got any decision as the HO can't then say we only got married to keep him from deportation etc)
Yes, probably the right move in your case. Unfortunately, your husband's case is quite complex and the IND is very very slow when it comes to considering complex cases.jannahjewel wrote: He applied for Asylum and we also submitted LTR (M) forms - (I'm not sure if thats right - the leave to remain on basis of marriage forms) and both applications mentioned the other which we were told strengthened our article 8 (Human rights) claim.
Again, NO deportation order may be issued against him unless he has committed a criminal offence.jannahjewel wrote: If he didn't apply for asylum then I think he could have been liable for deportation from the day he arrived (clandestinely) as he is allowed to remain here whilst his application is considered and until either a postive or negative decision is made.
This is true that they can do that but this is why the Article 8 of Human Rights Act is there for you to contest their decision. No one can be removed if such an action would fall in breach of person's human rights. So if they try you must immediately appeal on Human Rights.jannahjewel wrote: We thought about withdrawing his asylum application once married as it would hold more weight, but were advised that the Home Office would probably refuse the marriage application, and ask him to apply as a spouse visa from the dipolomatic post abroad (because he'd be illegal here)
Well, I cannot give you a full professional advice. Everything you are saying is right and therefore the HR Act is fully on your side.jannahjewel wrote: ...as a British Citizen, it's unlikely that I'd be safe there too to wait for him. By keeping the asylum application in place, it's his back-up, saying it's impossible to return to Iraq and apply as a spouse due to the current climate of unrest there.
IMHO the HO will notify you or rather your solicitor if the application is valid within a month - it will be after the asylum interview.I know that positive decisions for kurds are running at around 5% at the moment, so yes, I'm not too confident about the asylum outcome. So, if the HO don't have to consider the marriage application, when do you think they'll let us know about whether it is a valid application?
I believe you are refering to compassionate grounds overcoming a refusal of an application outside the rules - marriage and asylum. IMHO and based on the case law I am aware of the compassionate grounds in your case are not compelling enough for a refusal of the marriage application to be deemed disproportionate to effective immigration control. Your solicitor who deals with these matters more regularly may be better informed of case law in your favour.You mention that you know many people who've been through this and still had negative outcomes; fair enough, but on balance, have you ever come across some positive outcomes and if so, what made their individual cases strong enough to be successful?
The British Embassy in Amman will accept a Interim Travel Document for purposes of the application as per the immigration rules. IOM will give you details of ITD processing times. You need to verify with the Jordanian authorities that they will accept entry on a ITD - call their embassy in London.If we decide the best course of action is to apply from Jordan, would the IOM (voluntary return organisation) assist him to get back to Iraq as he has no passport (no Iraqi passport) to get there? How long does this take?
He is already in breach of the immigration laws as an illegal/ clandestine entrant.Would my husband be in breech of immigration laws though, say for example, his asylum application gets refused, and he returns straight back to Iraq (to apply from Jordan)?
Under the Geneva Convention your husband cannot be removed from the UK pending a decision on his asylum application - this does not mean he is legal as per my comment above. IMHO if he takes all the relevant documentation with him to Jordan a settlement visa will be issued within a month. Going to Iraq? - is his life not in danger there as per his asylum claim? I believe there are direct flights to Amman.He'll have complied with everything they said to him. He's allowed to be here whilst his application is at least considered, and then when they say "go" he "goes," then I can't see that he's been in breech of stay or has a "bad" immigration history. I'm just worried that if he returns to Iraq, goes to Jordan, and then Jordan take a long time to make a decision, then we'll be seperated for years
Refers to in country FLR/ILR applications submitted by post that are valid and straightforward - yours is neither.The Home Office guidelines state we shouldn't be waiting more than 13 weeks for a marriage application decision, I guess what's being said is that that's highly inaccurate then?
The HO should have this info on his file but he can mention it - it will not have a bearing on the asylum application per se which will be decided on the grounds of the Geneva Convention.One more, SHOULD my husband mention our marriage at his asylum interview or wait for the officer to bring it up? Should he talk about the two simultantiously? What's going to be better?
See my comment regarding a return to Iraq. Inclusion of the asylum paperwork only indicates that a claim was lodged. You will not get a letter from the MP or solicitor stating there was no deportation - only the HO can do that which they won't. Get the solicitor to write a letter explaining the series of events including the relevant hearing dates. Submission of travel tickets showing a departure from the UK and of course matching entry stamps into Jordan on his ITD will verify his leaving the UK. You should also withdraw the asylum application in writing although a departure automatically does this. It follows that if an asylum interview was held today and he left tomorrow he would never be deported. In all cases the ECO at Amman will refer to the Home Office (Asylum unit) and clarify the series of events.So, if he goes back to Iraq, and applies from Jordan, would it help to include all of his asylum paperwork and a letter from my MP and solicitor for example, to confirm that he hasn't been deported? Thats surely going to speed things up? How long would it take (roughly) to apply from Jordan?
The solicitor may be following your joint instructions to keep your husband in the UK so presumably will consider various options - whether these are in your best interests are dependent on the facts of the matter on a case by case basis. A decision as to whether to withdraw the asylum application is really yours - I hope the info here and consultation with your solicitor can assist. However attending the interview is part of the 'credibility' aspect of the claim.Do people still think we should withdraw the asylum application? Has that actually made things worse for us? Our solicitor advised us to do both but maybe he just wanted more money!
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The information I provided may act as a solution to their problem so I believe posting it is justified. Whereas on the otherhand I cannot find where my post may have breached those rules so it appears your post is not.
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