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No you don't need a job, your wife simply needs to apply for an EU Spouse entry permit at the relevant embassy in Vietnam, you dont need to prove anything more than the fact your married, and state you intend to live and work in that country. If you then want to use this route to come back to the UK then you will have to prove you did work in said country usualy for at least 6 months but to gain entry and live there initially its not required.frustratedbrit wrote:Hi Franko,
Yes, good question, but don't I need a job in a non-UK EEA country first? I am currently looking for such a job. In the interim, I can't handle being apart from my family any longer, and yet would like my parents to see them and would like not to turn down a lucrative 6 month UK work contract if offered one. If push came to shove and I was offered work in both the UK and Europe, I would take the Europe option, to bring a long term solution to this chaos.
Even if he does decide to go down the spouse settlement visa route, he still has some difficult obstacles to overcome.Lucapooka wrote:The fact that you have not previously applied for a settlement visa (and been refused) will help. The fact that she has visited the UK previously and returned will also help. The biggest issue here, in my opinion, is an overall risk assessment of her reasons and motivation to return to Vietnam. She has a British husband and British child (all with an automatic right of abode in the UK), so what do you all do in VT than demands you all return there after the visit? Basically her strongest ties are you and the kids and if her family don't have strong ties that might be considered a risk. Do you have strong social and economic ties to Vietnam?
Well from reading your posts, this journey begun 3yrs 8 months ago, at that time you were entitled to apply for a prospective spouse visa, a process of say 3 months, though you had your reasons not too.frustratedbrit wrote: I think I'll go for a visitor visa for my wife, as a quick way of visiting the UK to enable my parents to see my daughter for the first time, and give me option of taking up a 6-month contract that I may get offered.