- BY Colin Yeo
Immigration update podcast, episode 75
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Welcome to episode 75 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we are covering March and there’s a lot to go over. We’ve got some EU law material, some fairly involved appeals law stuff on when a human rights claim generates a right or appeal or not, we’ll cover a few human rights issues around family life and settlement, briefly touch on some protection claims including a Supreme Court case and then end with mentions for the EU Settlement Scheme and the upcoming Immigration Bill.
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The downloadable 30-minute podcast follows the running order below:
EU law
“Genuine chance of being engaged” test for retaining EU worker status found unlawful
EU citizens are protected by EU law, High Court reminds government
Appeals law
Grant of limited instead of indefinite leave does not generate human rights appeal
Home Office can ignore human rights claims bolted on to normal immigration applications
Upper Tribunal says no duty of candour on Home Office in statutory appeals
You can now raise new matters before the Upper Tribunal
Fees and applications
Immigration Health Surcharge rising to £624 in October 2020
Fee waiver for children denied British citizenship by discredited paternity law
Human rights
Family life: substance over form
Who counts as a “partner” for the purposes of deportation law?
Judicial review challenge to restricted leave policy fails
Home Office can refuse settlement to those on long-term Discretionary Leave
Long waits for visa documents may give rise to compensation
Protection claims
Removing Afghan Sikhs does not breach their Article 3 rights
Upper Tribunal grants refugee family reunion outside the Immigration Rules
Supreme Court says immigration tribunal can decide for itself if appellant was trafficked
EU Settlement Scheme
New statement of changes to the Immigration Rules: HC 120