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United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> K v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Pakistan) [2003] UKIAT 00037 (05 August 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2003/00037.html Cite as: [2003] UKIAT 00037, [2003] UKIAT 37 |
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[2003] UKIAT 00037 K (Pakistan)
Date of Decision: 7 May 2003
Date of Promulgation: 05/08/03
Representatives:
Mrs L Singh, Presenting Officer for the appellant.
Mr F Mohammed of Counsel instructed by International Immigration Advisory Service for the respondent.
a) The respondent had not been viewed as a credible witness by the Adjudicator who dismissed his asylum appeal.
b) The respondent had taken legal advice (albeit incorrect advice) which confirmed to him that him and his wife that if they married then his application would be successful. This clearly provided the respondent with a motive for entering into his current marriage – namely to obtain leave to enter or remain in this country.
c) Their son has not spent his formative years in the UK being only eight months old.
d) The parties are in a genuine and subsisting marriage.
e) At the time of the decision the parties were married and had a young child.
f) The parties have committed themselves financially to a life in the UK having purchased their present property and both parties are in gainful employment.
g) If the respondent was refused leave to remain then the spouse would have to give up work to look after her son and therefore would be unable to comply with requirements of the immigration rules on maintenance. Similarly if she went to Pakistan pending her husband's fresh immigration application she again would fail to comply with the rules.
h) The respondent spends all day looking after his son whilst his wife is at work and there is a strong bond between them.
i) The respondent' wife is a British citizen and has lived in the UK all her life and only visits Pakistan for holidays and family occasions.
j) The respondent's wife suffers from a skin disorder which gets worse in hot climates.
Based upon these findings the Adjudicator concluded that although the interference in family life of the respondent is in accordance with the law as he has lived in the United Kingdom without authority since October 1998, and the removal was proposed for the legitimate aim of immigration control, the interference was nevertheless disproportionate.
K Drabu
Vice President