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Consider moving back to Zimbabwe to support your family.leslowe wrote:Ok, let me put this in a nutshell. My sister and her daughter live in and are still in Zimbabwe. My sister because of her illness can no longer work. She has funds for her daughters schooling until December 2013 then her daughter will no longer be able to attend school. My sister, because of her illness can no longer look after her daughter. I would like to bring her here to the UK (the daughter) and if possible either be her legal guardian or adopt her. I just want to know if it would be possible to at least bring her here and put her in school, the rest would come later (adoption etc)
Thanks
Since the girl is a minor and if your sister agrees, You can adopt your niece. once you sort out the paper work it should be possible to bring her to the uk as your child. You will have to communicate with family law lawyers in Zimbabwe to find out the particulars but it is a possibility.leslowe wrote:I want to bring my sister's 14 year old daughter to the UK to live as my sister is unwell and unable to look after her and there is no other family living in Zimbabwe.
I am a British Citizen and both myself and my Husband are in full time employment, our children have all but left home so there is plenty of room.
How do I go about achieving this?
Time is of the essence
Please help.
Good post.MPH80 wrote:The tone on these boards can be quite short and sharp at times - but you have to lay all the options out. You snapping at Wanderer does nothing to help your status with other people.
You cannot bring the child without the mother - any attempt to adopt her by you/your wife wouldn't be accepted by the UKBA. So you have to find a way to bring the mother permanently, and since the only option there would be an adult dependant visa, which would require your sister to be in such a state that she can't look after herself on a day to day basis - you can't do that.
(note - she'd have to be in that state already, and then you'd have to show how you can afford to look after her here without recourse to public funds, but not able to afford to pay for someone to care for her in SA - a very very tricky problem).
So - your two legal options are:
1) Go back
2) Follow the EEA route
M.