if an asylum who don't have a visa and lives in UK gets married to a british citizen,,, what does he has to do
if an asylum who don't have a visa and lives in UK gets married to a british citizen,,, what does he has to do
Assuming you mean marrying in the UK - Provided they are 'lawfully present' in the UK (ie not an illegal immigrant or failed asylum-seeker), and both parties are free to marry, there is no reason why not.
No - if you seek asylum in Canada from the UK, you will be treated as a new case. Asylum status is not transferable between countries.
Someone unsuccessful in seeking sanctuary.
Humanitarian asylum is sometimes a difficult on the part administrative judges in the UK. People from some nations in the Middle East have a greater chance of asylum.
He broke free of the asylum. He saught asylum within the UK.
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Asylum - 2013 SUSPENDED is rated/received certificates of: UK:15 (self applied)
There is deep skepticism against asylum seekers. On the one hand everyone can symphatise with genuine asylum seekers. But most people feel that this system being abused, that most asylum applicants are merely economic migrants that use the system to live in the UK when they would otherwise not qualify for an entry visa. The fact is that most asylum claims are denied because the vast majority are not able to prove their case. And when asylum is denied, they dont leave the country and work illegally in the UK (which is a privilege granted by legal residency and they dont pay into the NIS). So they go from place to place working illegally and making sure they DO NOT carry their passport or have it readily accessible where they live. In the UK, immigration is required to have the passport of the person they are trying to deport, the failed asylum seekers, knowing this rule, purposefully hide their passport so that if caught, they will be released and not deported. It is things like this that creates a negative impression of asylum seekers.
I am not sure about 2006 but in 2004 there were 34,000 arriving. That represented 8.5% of the applicants to the industrialised world.
Provided you are BOTH 'lawfully present' in the UK - meaning you're BOTH entitled to be here - then there's nothing stopping you from marrying each other. You would go through the same process as anyone else wanting to get married.
Asylum - 2011 I was released on: USA: 2011 (limited) UK: 1 December 2011 (London Underground Film Festival)
in the year 2000 there where 80,000 aslyum seekers in the world