Assuming that both parties, or at least the Petitioner (the person seeking the divorce) is resident in England and Wales then the English court has jurisdiction.
I'm assuming that you are the petitioner and live in England and Wales. You may be entitiled to public funding (legal aid), depending on your financial circumstances. You should therefore first of all find out by going to the Legal Services commission website. Go to the eligibility calculator, answer the questions and you will then know whether you are eligible. If so then you may as well get a solicitor to sort your divorce out for you as the costs may be nil, or at least much less than paying privately. You can find a specialist divorce lawyer on www.resolution.org.uk to which all good divorce lawyers belong.
If the spouse is resident in Albania, the court still has jurisdiction and the only difference is that it may take a bit longer, but not too much.
If you aren't eligible for public funding and can't afford a solicitor you can issue the divoce petition alone. You can download the forms from the court service website (you will also need a statement of arrangements for children form if there are children).
Alternatively you can visit the court office and they will give you all the necessary forms free of charge. You then lodge the petition form, marriage certificate, children's statement i (if applicable) and a fee of £300. The court will give you a leaflet explaining the rest of the procedure.
As long as you have the proper documentation from Albania your marriage will be legally recognized in England.
If your marriage is Islamic, then no but if you are married by 'justices' like a registry office then yes.
A Cuban marriage certificate is a recognised legal document in the UK.
Proxy weddings are not recognized as legally binding in most jurisdictions. “proxy marriage” is rather alien in the UK
Am from united kingdom I was married in kenys is my marrige legal in uk and how do I go about getting divorced
NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yes it is, a conrtract of a legal marriage is valid anywhere in the world.
It is not good in the UK. The license should be issued by the county were the ceremony is. However, a marriage performed in Ghana would be considered legal in the UK.
If the marriage took place in the UK you file in the UK in the normal way. If the marriage took place in America, I would assume that you file in the American state where the marriage took place. Get some legal advice or call the Community Legal Service 08453 454345 to find out.
Yes, proxy marriage in allowed in Ghana and can be used legally in the UK for visa purposes.
Yes if you get married by 'justices' like registry office but not if you have an Islamic (muslim) marriage.
There is no way to get illegally married and then acquire any of the legal rights of marriage.
Assuming that you have a legal heterosexual marriage in the UK (that has government certification), that marriage will be recognized in Algeria. As a result, in order to marry an Algerian, you will need to get a divorce. If you have a same-sex marriage in the UK, you will not need to get a divorce in the UK to marry the Muslim in Algeria, but that marriage will not be recognized in the UK (because you would now be married to two people contemporaneously). If you are not married in the UK, then, obviously, you will not need a divorce to get married.