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I came to UK in 2000 with student visa, and then switched into FW:WISS visa in 2006:sakura wrote:How long have you been in the UK and under what categories? When will your ILR application come?
IDI Guidence for ILR, Chapter 18, 2.1.3 Middle of third paragraph says:-Adazhou wrote:I came to UK in 2000 with student visa, and then switched into FW:WISS visa in 2006:sakura wrote:How long have you been in the UK and under what categories? When will your ILR application come?
Oct 2000-Jan 2006 Student visa
Jan 2006-Jan 2008 FW:WISS visa
As I've got a offer to do a PhD course starting in Oct this year, I will have to go back to China some time in October or November to change/re-apply a student visa. it will take me three weeks to go and come back. Do you know in this case is my residence still continouse? or does the clock start again?
Hi Sashank, Thanks for your advice.sakura wrote: IDI Guidence for ILR, Chapter 18, 2.1.3 Middle of third paragraph says:-
A person who leaves the UK when one period of leave expires, and comes back with a fresh grant of leave, wil not be resuming his continuous residence, but will instead be starting a new period of residence in the UK.
Therefore in my view the clock stops for 10 year rule once your current visa expires while you not being in the UK.
Sashank
Adazhou wrote:Hi Sashank, Thanks for your advice.sakura wrote: IDI Guidence for ILR, Chapter 18, 2.1.3 Middle of third paragraph says:-
A person who leaves the UK when one period of leave expires, and comes back with a fresh grant of leave, wil not be resuming his continuous residence, but will instead be starting a new period of residence in the UK.
Therefore in my view the clock stops for 10 year rule once your current visa expires while you not being in the UK.
Sashank
But as what I said, my current visa is valid until the beginning of next year, and I'm going to change it into Student visa in October this year (that's three month before current visa expire), and will only takes me 3 weeks in China to change it.
According to the guidance you mentioned above, I will leave UK before my current visa expired, and will also come back to UK with New student visa before my current visa expire. So it should be counted as continous residence, isn't it?
Please advise.
Thanks
Hi, Costa, Thanks for your message. I've phoned HO and was told that as a FW visa holder, I have to go back to my own country to change the new student visa, it can't be switched in UK. And they also said I can do this before my current visa expire.costa wrote:Surely Adazhou's case will be treated as continuous when he get new visa in China before old one expire. It proves he/she maintain a tie with the uk all the time.
However, if I were Adazhou, I will change my visa to a student visa before the PhD course starts (said 1/Oct/2007). Accordingly, as a prospective student, he should be do so between July~September in the UK or in China.
Actually, I am not quite sure OP can switch his current Fresh Talent
visa back to student visa in the UK. Normally, student visa should be obtained from their countries. So why not call home office to check if it can switch in the UK.
upAdazhou wrote:Hi, I have a Fresh Talent: Working in Scotland Scheme visa which will be expired in Jan next year. As I'm joining a PhD course in university and will have to go back to China to apply a new student visa. I'm wondering if I go back to apply the new visa in this year (before my current visa expired), is my residence still counted as unbroken?
Does any body know it? Please help!
Because that's how the law has been written.SYH wrote:Why can't you have two visas running concurrently?
LTR... Yes this is correct. The law does not prohibit this.olisun wrote: So are you saying a person can hold more than 1 type of visa (UK) concurrently?
And which one is active currently?Jeff Albright wrote:LTR... Yes this is correct. The law does not prohibit this.olisun wrote: So are you saying a person can hold more than 1 type of visa (UK) concurrently?
I have got a 3 year discretionary leave following a successful in-country appeal on HR and also hold 5 years Work Permit visa, which I obtained from abroad.
I guess you can hold as many visas as you can but you are only allowed to enter the country with one type. So, you cannot be staying in the UK Jeff concurrently on two visas (LTR based on HR and also WP EC). I believe the WP EC supercedes your LTR and you were admitted on your arrival on that basis. Please clarify.olisun wrote:And which one is active currently?Jeff Albright wrote:LTR... Yes this is correct. The law does not prohibit this.olisun wrote: So are you saying a person can hold more than 1 type of visa (UK) concurrently?
I have got a 3 year discretionary leave following a successful in-country appeal on HR and also hold 5 years Work Permit visa, which I obtained from abroad.
I just called the HO now and they said one can hold only one visa to the UK and that also the last one.jes2jes wrote:I guess you can hold as many visas as you can but you are only allowed to enter the country with one type. So, you cannot be staying in the UK Jeff concurrently on two visas (LTR based on HR and also WP EC). I believe the WP EC supercedes your LTR and you were admitted on your arrival on that basis. Please clarify.olisun wrote:And which one is active currently?Jeff Albright wrote:LTR... Yes this is correct. The law does not prohibit this.olisun wrote: So are you saying a person can hold more than 1 type of visa (UK) concurrently?
I have got a 3 year discretionary leave following a successful in-country appeal on HR and also hold 5 years Work Permit visa, which I obtained from abroad.