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thank vr for your brief reply.VR wrote:moon1010,
The rules on long residence recognise the ties a person may form with the UK over a lengthy period of residence here.
A person who has completed 10 years continuous and lawful residence in the UK can apply for indefinite leave to remain (ILR) on this basis. For the purposes of ILR under 10 years long residence category, the residence in the UK must be both continuous and lawful.
Requirements for long residence
The applicant must meet the following requirements, in order to be granted indefinite leave:
The applicant must have at least 10 years lawful residence in the UK.
There must be no reason why granting leave is against the public good.
The applicant must meet the knowledge of language and life requirement.
The applicant must not have one or more unspent convictions within the meaning of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974.
Continuous residence is defined in paragraph 276A of the Immigration Rules. Continuous residence means residence in the UK for an unbroken period. For the purposes of long residence, a period is not considered broken if the applicant:
was absent from the UK for six months or less at any one time, and
had existing leave to enter or remain upon their departure and return.
Lawful residence is defined in paragraph 276A of the Immigration Rules as a period of continuous residence in which the applicant had one of the following:
existing leave to enter or remain
temporary admission within section 11 of the 1971 Immigration Act where leave to enter or remain is subsequently granted
an exemption from immigration control, including where an exemption ceases to apply if it is immediately followed by a grant of leave to enter or remain.
Events that break continuous residence
Continuous residence is considered to be broken if the applicant has:
been absent from the UK for a period of more than six months at any one time, or is absent from the UK for a shorter period but does not have valid leave to enter the UK on their return, or valid leave to remain on their departure from the UK
been removed or deported from the UK, or has left the UK following refusal of leave to enter or remain
left the UK and by doing so, showed a clear intention not to return
left the UK under circumstances in which they could have no real chance of returning to the UK lawfully
been convicted of an offence and been given a custodial sentence, or ordered to be detained in an institution other than a prison, such as a hospital or young offenders institute, not including suspended sentences
spent a total of 18 months outside the UK throughout the whole 10 year period.
Discretion for breaks in lawful residence
It may be appropriate for the UKBA to use discretion if an applicant:
has short gap in lawful residence through making previous applications out of time by no more than 28 calendar days, and
meets all the other requirements for lawful residence.
Here is the link for the form
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... formlr.pdf
Good luck
vr
Thank u very much.VR wrote:moon1010,
You can apply on completion of 9 years and 11 months.(Generally 28 days prior to the 10yr limit).
Apply straight away. They are notorious for bringing in rule changes. And now their decisions cannot be questioned.
Cheers
vr
ok i believe u thank alot.VR wrote:moon1010,
I know this for a fact because an old friend in Birmingham applied through this route successfully.
Also earlier when I was rummaging through the UKBA website,I found this on there.
Take it 199% and go ahead.
cheers
vr
yes i read that was just confused that might be only for new application. thanks for clarification.VR wrote:They are notorious for misplacing stuff. Separate tracked applications are always better. You can see the link for the 28 day rule.
cheers
vr
thank 4 ur helpVR wrote:You need to first switch to FLR(M) and then board ILR. IMHO, Hence it will make sense to send separate envelopes. Others who have done it may want to share their opinion.
cheers
vr
IMPORTANT: IN the dependants' FLR(M) attach a covering letter and clearly mention or point to the main applicant's application for ILR(LR) so that they can link up and tag.