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1. The question whether the appellant “is a persistent offender” is a question of mixed fact and law and falls to be determined by the Tribunal as at the date of the hearing before it. 2. The phrase “persistent offender” in s.117D(2)(c) of the 2002 Act must mean the same...

15th April 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The long read: It has never been easy to win as an immigration lawyer – but now the government is trying to make it impossible If you haven’t seen this already you really should. Source: The lawyer who takes the cases no one wants | Aida Edemariam | News |...

15th April 2016
BY Colin Yeo

A student was for 20 days a total of £11.68 short of the required funds of £2,040, which were required to be held for 28 days continuously. In percentage terms, that would be a shortfall of 0.57%. Taking a hard line, President McCloskey holds: The de minimis principle is not...

15th April 2016
BY Colin Yeo

Periods of study for a qualification below degree level, are capable of being counted as time spent studying at degree level for the purpose of paragraph 245ZX(ha), if the period of study is taught at degree level, and when the qualification itself is added to other periods of study, resulting...

14th April 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The final judgment of the court in SSHD v NA Case C‑115/15 (previously NA (Pakistan) [2015] EWCA Civ 140) will come later this year, but the Advocate General Opinion released today suggests that victims of domestic violence should retain EU law rights of residence even where the EU citizen was...

14th April 2016
BY Colin Yeo

In this case the Upper Tribunal Administrative Appeals Chamber finds that the “past presence test” for Disability Living Allowance unlawfully discriminates against refugees and their families. The offending provision is “disapplied” by the tribunal. The same test is applied for Attendance Allowance, Personal Independence Payment and Carer’s Allowance, I understand....

13th April 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration has published his Inspection Plan for the next three years. It includes inspections on sham marriages, landlord immigration checks, NHS charging, exit checks and litigation (including Home Office Presenting Officers) in the first year. Source: The Chief Inspector releases his Inspection Plan for...

12th April 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The Home Office has issued a new updated version of its policy on section 3C and 3D leave: Leave extended by section 3C (and leave extended by section 3D in transitional cases). Section 3C and 3D leave is an automatic type of leave created by an amendment to the Immigration...

11th April 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The President has issued an important determination on the correct approach to multiple applications and appeals from family members, specifically a parent or parents and a child or children with 7 years of residence. The case is PD and Others (Article 8 : conjoined family claims) Sri Lanka [2016] UKUT...

4th April 2016
BY Colin Yeo

An Iraqi national who entered the UK in 2002 and had been considered “unremovable” by the Home Office since 2005 was not entitled to any form of status, the High Court has found. Paragraph 353B did not avail the claimant and the case of Hamzeh & Ors v Secretary of...

31st March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

David Bolt, the Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration, recently published a new report into the effectiveness of services that the Home Office outsources to private contractors, finding that inefficiency and lack of communication contribute to a waste of resources and time. The full report is available here: An Inspection...

31st March 2016
BY Caterina Franchi

Someone recently asked me whether time spent under EU law can count towards a 10 year long residence application so I thought I would flag up the answer for others as well. In short, “yes”. I would have thought there would be relatively few people who find themselves in this...

30th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

A High Court judge has awarded the family member of an EU national a total of £136,048 in damages. The award consists of £76,578 for false imprisonment and £59,470 for breach of EU law. The Home Office is also criticised for having made “inaccurate and misleading” submissions to previous judges...

30th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

Following the last post on FM on this, Cranston J heard argument from the Claimants on 25 and 26 February 2016 but, having done so, adjourned the hearing, on the application of the Home Office, on the grounds that the SSHD was not ready to proceed. A case management hearing...

29th March 2016
BY Anthony Vaughan

A recent report by the Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration, David Bolt, revealed that the management of curtailment decisions in Tier 4 cases is inconsistent and the Home Office is unable to deal with the thousands of curtailment cases and Sponsors notifications it receives every month. You can see the...

29th March 2016
BY Caterina Franchi

Still no sign of the full judgment being available, just this summary and this press release from the solicitor. Summary of the summary: 8. Ultimately, the Tribunal has subjected all of the evidence to detailed and careful scrutiny. Having done so, it concludes that the Secretary of State has not...

23rd March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The Government has confirmed that the Immigration Skills Charge will be set at £1,000 per year per migrant worker sponsored under Tier 2 of the Points Based System. A lower rate will apply for small businesses and charities. On 21 March 2016 in a House of Lords debate on the...

23rd March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

I recently made a partially successful Freedom of Information request on waiting times for different types of EEA residence documents. The information for the whole of 2015 taken as an average was released but not more recent information on current waiting times in 2016. The waiting times were as follows:...

23rd March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The Law Society is hosting a talk by Mr Justice McCloskey on immigration judicial review cases, following up on the excellent practice note on the same subject. The event is a free one on 5 May 2016 and details can be found here. The lecture will be followed by an...

22nd March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

I have belatedly updated my Surinder Singh ebook, which is now available for purchase or to be downloaded by previous customers who created a user account at the time of purchase. There are some quite significant changes and additions. I no longer recommend to clients that they should use the...

22nd March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights today published a Memorandum addressed to the UK Immigration Minister, James Brokenshire, in which he condemns the use of anti migrant language and rhetoric by Ministers including David Cameron and Theresa May, criticises discriminatory and disproportionate measures against migrants and expresses disappointment...

22nd March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

Very upsetting news on Saturday from the French lawyers in the migrant camp in Calais. You can donate here to show solidarité. Today, March 17th 2016, just prior to 6 p.m., an arson attack was committed against the wooden cabin occupied by the Calais Appeal Legal Centre. This wooden cabin,...

21st March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

An interesting set of draft Council conclusions on convergence in asylum decision practices obtained by Statewatch sets out a roadmap towards greater consistency in asylum decision making. There is a lot of work to do on this front, as shown by IRIN in their excellent and infographic heavy piece Playing...

21st March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

In an interesting but almost impenetrable judgment, the Court of Justice of the European Union gives some guidance on procedural protections available to those bringing challenges to EU law decisions which adversely affect them. The case is Benalla v Belgium C‑161/15. The point that arose was a fairly obscure one....

18th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

Big increase to fees for immigration judicial review applications from 21 March 2016. See paragraph 4 of the Civil Proceedings, Family Proceedings and Upper Tribunal Fees (Amendment) Order 2016: (a) for the entry corresponding to fee 2.1 (application on notice where no other fee is specified) for “£80” substitute “£255”;...

17th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

Just a quick catch up post to alert readers to the Government’s response to the damning report by James Ewins, published on 17 December 2015, and developments since then. The review concluded that the Coalition Government’s amendments to the Immigration Rules on overseas domestic workers exposed them to enhanced risk...

17th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The fantastic organisation Right to Remain have published their Toolkit for migrants seeking to understand and defend their legal position in the UK. It is a great resource and I can highly recommend it: The Right to Remain Toolkit is a guide to the UK immigration and asylum system. It...

17th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

This guide is intended for tenants and those advising individuals in the private rented sector. This includes those currently renting as well as those seeking a property to rent. It is intended as a guide to ensure that tenants and practitioners understand: The background to the ‘right to rent’ scheme...

17th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

Encouragement and incitement is sufficient for a refugee to fall within the exclusion clauses of the Refugee Convention, the tribunal has held: For a person to be excluded from refugee protection under Article 1F(c) of the Refugee Convention on the basis that they knowingly incited and encouraged acts contrary to...

16th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The tribunal has held, inevitably, that the statutory human rights considerations apply to children as well as adults, although other considerations must also be taken into account: (i) In section 117B(1)-(5) of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 parliament has made no distinction between adult and child immigrants. (ii)...

15th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

Family life can be precarious even though Parliament forgot to mention it in the statutory considerations on Article 8. Or The Home Office May Have Its Cake And Eat It. That “precariousness” is a criterion of relevance to family life as well as private life cases is an established part...

15th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

A date stamp in a passport or travel document does not confer ILR in cases of returning residents, the Upper Tribunal has held in an interesting case. The facts make it all the more interesting: it involves a recognised refugee from Libya who had returned to live in that country...

15th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

The tribunal is sticking to its guns on whether a human rights claim must meet the paragraph 353 test for fresh claims in order to give rise to a right of appeal: 1. Notwithstanding the amendments brought about by the Immigration Act 2014 to the types of decisions appealable under...

14th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

What requirements does a Tier 4 student need to meet if his or her college loses its sponsor licence whilst they wait for a decision on an application to extend their stay? In this case, the student received a letter telling him that the Home Office had suspended a decision...

14th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

UPDATE: overturned by the Court of Appeal in R (On the Application Of Raza) (Pakistan) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2016] EWCA Civ 807. R (on the application of Raza) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Bail – conditions – variation – Article 9...

14th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo

A new set of Immigration Rules has been laid in Statement of Changes HC877. The changes take effect on 6 April 2016. You can access the explanatory notes or the full rules or both together. There are a LOT of changes. Stand out features include: Those with a “litigation debt”...

11th March 2016
BY Colin Yeo
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