Sunday 9 December 2012

Tier 1 Entrepreneur Visa is Changing 13.12.2012

Tier 1 Entrepreneur Visa is Changing

Students on Tier 4 must make most from the change coming to effect this December 2012.
No funds other than from a registered  and approved source FSA £50,000.00 will be excepted on and after 13th December 2012.

Tier 4 holders must apply immediately. Under the £200,000.00 funds from overseas can not be switched in-country. They must return to their home country and make an application. The draw back doing this is, application overseas does not earn a right of appeal which is crucial sometimes.


Thursday 6 December 2012

Tier 1 Entrepreneur Bank letter for 75 points


CONFIDENTIAL

Dated: 29th November 2012


For the attention of the UK Border Agency


In regards to the application of Mr.____________Tier 1 Entrepreneur visa status in the United Kingdom:

I have the consent of Mr.____________to share these findings with the Agency. I will confirm the contents of this letter to the Agency at their request.

Mr._____________ has INR 32,127520/= (Thirty two million one hundred twenty seven thousand five hundred twenty only) in cash deposit held with this financial institution for investment in a business in the United Kingdom.

On this date 29th November 2012

Mr.___________has INR 32,127520/= (in words only) amount of money in his own name available for investment in a business in the United Kingdom.

I can confirm that above mentioned funds are cashable at any time and freely transferable and disposable in the United Kingdom.

This XXXX Bank is regulated by Reserve Bank of India.

The applicant has the following amount of money held in this institution under the name of:

Account Name: Mr._____________________
National Identity Card No. _______________
Account No.
Branch Code:
Current cleared funds in Indian Rupees: 32,127520/=

Name of Authorised Financial Institution: Bank name

Address of Authorised Financial Institution:

Name and contact details of the Author of this document:

Telephone No:
Fax No.

Email Address:

Signature of authorised bank official: _____________________

Official Stamp/seal:__________________

Thursday 15 November 2012

Tier 1 Entrepreneur Visa (Business Visa) Appeal/ refusal Queries

Tier 1 Entrepreneur visa

ukvisasguidance@gmail.com

Here, i list the regular encounters from applicants who write to me on my email address above.


I applied for Tier 1 Entrepreneur in country from current Student visa
application reached a decision of refusal on the basis of English. Actually,i had put in a covering letter that the English exam has been appeared for and results of C1 due in 3 weeks. The caseworker wrote a letter requesting the same in 7 days. The certificate had arrived and was posted, for which i have the proof of posting, but never reached to the UKBA. guess, royal mail lost it.
Case refused and now given a right of appeal.

1.How many merits do you think the appeal has to win it?
2.any similar experiences in dealing with an appeal?
3.What should i go for Oral or written hearing?
4.any particular references to be made in order to support my appeal from any previous judgements that members may be aware of?
5.Should i take the help of solicitor or the case is too simple for me to explain and for the judge to approve?
6.if judge approves do i get an approval letter for Tier 1 or the case goes back to the UKBA for the assessment, in this case i am worried about the time if it resets the counter that i had to wait for this decision from the UKBA
7.how much time is taken by the tribunal to reach a decision, the entire process as i have further travel plans to my home country. Everything has been disrupted for now.

Kindly, advise ASAP need to lodge the appeal in next 5 working days


Answers

Hi

I think you have a very good chance to win in oral appeal.

I have seen many cases like this and judges consider it. You may need to hire a very good and confident immigration lawyer.

You may need the followings to argue:

1. Proof that you had already mentioned in your covering letter that certificate will take 3 weeks to arrive.

2. Proof that you were issued C1 pass certificate before refusal.

3. Get a kind of proof that Royal mail has acknowledged that they have lost it.

4. Arrange another C1 certificate from issuing body of your English language test. (not necessarily at the time of appeal, but you must have it when you go to hearing).

5. Just appeal within allocation time.

Good luck

Ukvisasguidance@gmail.com

keywords,

Tier 1 Entrepreneur Visa (Business Visa) Appeal/ refusal Queries, first tier court, upper tribunal, UKBA, home office

Wednesday 31 October 2012

Tier 1 decision in India

Tier 1 entrepreneur visa decisions are being reached under 21 days by the British High Commission, India

Tuesday 23 October 2012

Format for Witness statement at Appeal UK


In the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal Appeal number IA/XXXXX/200X

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS
Between
[Your client’s name] Mr Hxxxxx Bxxxxxxxx
Appellant
and
[Respondent’s name] Secretary of State for the Home Department (or ECO)
Respondent
Description of documents
eg chronology
witness statement of [name]
‘A’ = Appellant
‘S’ = Sponsor
Date Incident
A born in [place of birth]
S born in [place of birth]
A commenced current employment
S commenced current employment
A and S first met in [place]
A and S decided to marry in [place]
A and S commenced cohabiting as husband and wife
S returned to the UK
S visited A in [place]
S commenced maternity leave
S gives birth to child [name] in [place]
S returns to work from maternity leave
A applies for entry clearance
A interviewed by respondent in [place]
A refused entry clearance

Tuesday 18 September 2012

Article 8 ECHR changed!


Article 8 ECHR changes: New immigration categories based on private and family life

On 9th July 2012, changes to the Immigration Rules came into force. Some of these new Rules will make it easier for people who want to stay in the UK due to their private or family life here.

Long residence

Rule 276ADE enables you to apply for leave to remain based on your length of residence if you meet one of the following requirements:

• You have lived in the UK for at least 20 years; or

• You are between 18 and 25 and you have lived in the UK for at least half of your life; or

• You are an adult who has lived in the UK for less than 20 years but you do not have any social, cultural or family ties to your home country; or;

• You are a child under 18 and you have lived in the UK for at least 7 years.

If your application is successful then you will be granted 2 and a half years' leave to remain in the UK. You will have to apply to extend this for a further 2 and a half years at a time. Once you have been in the UK for 10 years in this category, you can apply for indefinite leave to remain.

Family life with your child

If you do not meet the other requirements of the Immigration Rules then you may be able to apply for leave to remain based on your family life with your child or children under new provisions in the Immigration Rules.

You will need to show that you meet the following requirements:

• You have a genuine and subsisting parental relationship with a child under 18; and

• The child is in the UK; and

• The child is British or has lived in the UK for at least 7 years; and

• It would not be reasonable to expect the child to leave the UK; and

• You have not been sentenced to 12 months or more in prison for a criminal offence; and

• The Home Office does not consider that your presence in the UK would be contrary to the public good; and

• You have not previously failed to provide information to the Home Office or to attend for an interview or medical examination that they required of you.

If your application is successful then you will be granted 2 and a half years' leave to remain and you will need to apply to extend it as above.

Family life with your spouse or partner

If you do not meet all the requirements for leave to remain as a spouse or partner, then you may still be able to apply for leave to remain based on your family life. The Home Office have now created a category in the Immigration Rules to enable you to do this.

You will need to show that you meet the following requirements:

• You are in a genuine relationship with someone who is British or who has indefinite leave to remain, refugee status or humanitarian protection; and

• There are 'insurmountable obstacles' to family life with your spouse or partner continuing outside the UK; and

• You have not been sentenced to 12 months or more in prison for a criminal offence; and

• The Home Office does not consider that your presence in the UK would be contrary to the public good; and

• You have not previously failed to provide information to the Home Office or to attend for an interview or medical examination that they required of you.

(Please note that the courts have previously said that a requirement of 'insurmountable obstacles' breaches Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and that the correct test should be whether it is reasonable for your spouse or partner to live outside the UK. This new requirement of the Immigration Rules is therefore likely to be challengeable in court.)

If your application is successful then you will be granted 2 and a half years' leave to remain and you will need to apply to extend it as above.

Deportation

If you have been convicted of a criminal offence and sentenced to at least 12 months in prison then you are automatically liable to be deported. However, you can avoid being deported if you can show that requiring you to leave the UK would breach your right to respect for private and family life under Article 8.

The new Immigration Rules say that in a deportation case you may be able to stay in the UK if you meet one of the following requirements:

1. Relationship with a child

• You have not been sentenced to 4 years or more in prison; and

• You have a genuine and subsisting parental relationship with a child under 18; and

• The child is in the UK; and

• The child is British or has lived in the UK for at least 7 years; and

• There are no other family members who could care for the child in the UK.

AND/OR

2. Relationship with a spouse or partner

• You have not been sentenced to 4 years or more in prison; and

• You are in a genuine relationship with someone who is British or has indefinite leave to remain, refugee status or humanitarian protection; and

• You have lived in the UK legally for at least 15 years before the decision to deport you (not including any time that you have spent in prison); and

• There are insurmountable obstacles to family life with your spouse or partner continuing outside the UK.

AND/OR

3. Long residence in the UK

• You have not been sentenced to 4 years or more in prison; and

• You have lived in the UK for at least 20 years before the decision to deport you and you have no social, cultural or family ties to your home country; OR

• You are under 25, you have spent at least half your life in the UK before the decision to deport you and you have no social, cultural or family ties to your home country.

OR

4. Exceptional circumstances

• You do not fall into any of the above categories but there are 'exceptional circumstances' in your case that mean requiring you to leave the UK would be disproportionate.

Changes to Immigration Rules for Point based Scheme


Changes to the Immigration Rules following the Supreme Court decision in Alvi

In R (on the application of Alvi) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] UKSC 33 the Supreme Court held that the UK Border Agency cannot refuse immigration applications purely because of Policy Guidance that is not contained in the Immigration Rules.

The Immigration Rules set out the requirements that people have to meet in order to be granted a visa or further leave to remain. They have to be laid before Parliament before coming into force, which gives them legal authority. However, the UKBA has often issued Policy Guidance and other documents, particularly in relation to the Points Based System, that claims to introduce additional requirements that are not contained in the Immigration Rules. The Supreme Court has now said that the Policy Guidance does not have the status of law. This means that it would be wrong to refuse someone who did not meet a requirement in the Policy Guidance unless that requirement was also contained in the Immigration Rules.

For example, the applicant in Alvi had been refused leave to remain as a Tier 2 (General) Migrant because his job was not at the correct level in the UKBA's Codes of Practice. However, the Supreme Court said that he should not have been refused for this reason because the Codes of Practice were not in the Immigration Rules and therefore they were not part of the law.

This confirms the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Secretary of State for the Home Department v Pankina and others [2010] EWCA Civ 719.

In response to this, new changes have been made to the Immigration Rules. The UKBA have attempted to put all the requirements of the Policy Guidance and other documents such as the Codes of Practice into the Immigration Rules so that they are now able to refuse applications that do not comply with them. The changes mainly affect applications under the Points Based System and applications by family members.

This means that the Immigration Rules are now a lot more complicated, with several new appendices. It would therefore be very easy to miss some of the strict new requirements.