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I have applied for a UK visitor visa to see my sick husband (who has ILR) in the hospital. It was my very first application ever, as I never intended to go to the UK until I finish my mandatory housemanship/internship training.

I urgently applied after my husband fell ill so suddenly, without thinking a lot about it and, ten days later, it got refused. I'm reapplying again, after correcting what went wrong the last time.

I am also making a human rights claim in my application this time around because I think I qualify for one. My husband of 2 years is bedridden in hospital so going there is the ONLY option. I cannot even talk to him on the phone because he has had brain surgery.

I am attaching pictures of the refusal notice. Do I have a chance this time after submitting all the right documents?

My bank statement does show regular flow of income but it's empty at the moment. As a junior doctor who is still training I get very little pay, my husband is my provider. I am being sponsored by my sister-in-law and her husband, both of whom are British citizens.

My questions are:

  1. Will an empty bank account adversely affect my application the next time despite the 3rd part sponsorship?
  2. Will a frank human rights claim attract more consideration from the ECO? To at least refer the case to the ECM or grant me the right to appeal in case refused?
  3. They previously stated I had limited evidence of my circumstances. Although I attached a letter from my mother stating that I'm the eldest of 5. Mom is a widow. But now I am attaching copies of my siblings' passports, 2 property deeds. I co-own the house we're living in with mom and siblings and I also have inherited another house that was owned by my father. In addition to my very important work, do these constitute what they consider "strong ties to home country"?

So in addition to getting all the translations done, this is what I'm attaching this time:

  1. My bank statement (showing an opening balance of about 850£, regular salaries and withdrawals over 6 months, closing balance of 10£).
  2. My employment letter (showing no objection to leave with dates/ stating I need to come back and make for the absence).
  3. Letter of internship from federal ministry of health.
  4. Letter from Sudan Medical Council showing I have preliminary registration with my reg. Number and that I will be granted full reg after completing internship.
  5. University certificate of graduation.
  6. Letter from the money exchange agency stating that my husband has been sending me monthly allowance from 1st receipt to last receipt.
  7. Property deeds (one of which I co-own with siblings and mom, other one is inheritance).
  8. Father's death certificate.
  9. Copies of mother's and siblings' passports.
  10. Letter from my mother saying I help her with my younger siblings both financially and emotionally and that she wants me to become a fully registered doctor and pursue my career (something I will NEVER be able to do if I go underground in UK).
  11. My own cover letter explaining my circumstances and list of documents.
  12. My marriage certificate.
  13. Photographs of myself, my husband, my sister-in-law and her husband on family occasions.
  14. Letter of sponsorship (updated)
  15. Passport copy of my sponsor.
  16. Bank statements of sponsor's spouse.
  17. Legal affidavit from my sister-in-law clarifying our relationship, and that she is taking care of her mother, and that she will take care of her brother after I leave.
  18. Letter from the hospital where my husband is at (2 actually the older one and a newer one from a different hospital as they've moved him).
  19. Husband's immigration status document.

Will these documents make my application stronger this time?

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    The only question I can see is "Do I have a chance this time after submitting all the right documents?" -- people do not understand a thing about probability / statistics. What if we were produce some stats that in a human rights claim with the right documentation, 1 out of 89 is refused? And what are you going to do differently if it's 27 or 239? Or, hell, what if 8 out of 10 is refused? Maths is not a crystal ball, we can not predict the outcome of a single event. The close reason is not because "opinion based" but because it can not be answered in a helpful way. I am sorry.
    – user4188
    Commented Jan 23, 2017 at 1:08
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    Nobody here can assess what chance you have of getting a visa. It seems clear there are a number of things you can do to prepare a stronger application by following the guidance in the refusal letter. You can, for instance, be sure to carefully follow the guidance and provide translated documents, provide proof that you have been granted leave from your job, and provide proof of your husband's immigration status in the UK. I'm very sorry to hear about your husband and realize the immigration process is adding even more stress at a difficult time. My thoughts are with your family. Commented Jan 23, 2017 at 1:11
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    The ECO went out of his or her way to document the correctable problems with your application compared to some of the letters I've seen posted here. This suggests that your application was treated with some sympathy, but there were omissions that just could not be tolerated. If I were you, I would take heart from that fact and submit another application with those deficiencies corrected: English translations, information about your husband's ILR, plans for your husband's care after you leave, etc.
    – phoog
    Commented Jan 23, 2017 at 20:04

1 Answer 1

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You submitted a very weak application for a Standard Visitor Visa and got refused on Appendix V 4.2 (a) + (c). Usually that combination is a indicator that they decided you would go underground in the UK and eventually become reliant upon public funds. Your premise was to visit your spouse who is seriously ill. You posted your refusal notice and have some questions about it because you contemplate a fresh application.

Will an empty bank account adversely affect my application the next time despite the 3rd part sponsorship?

Yes, of course an empty bank account will hurt your chances of success. You can read in your refusal notice that they have conceded the 'bona fides' of your sponsors and have similarly conceded your sponsor's capacity. Sponsorship is not the issue and will not be the issue next time (as long as your sister-in-law extends her sponsorship offer). In this article: Should I submit bank statements when applying for a UK Visa? What do they say about me? we also explain that it's not about the ending balance. They will be looking for a cash flow stream that shows you are 'plugged in' to the local economy in the Sudan. If your bank statements are not providing that kind of picture you can expect serious problems.

Will a frank human rights claim attract more consideration from the ECO?

Let's back up and make a clarification... Human rights, in the context of Article 8, i.e., the right to family life, are not applicable to visitor applications. They apply to settlement applications only, like a spouse visa or leave to remain as a family member. Plus the courts have already ruled that visiting the UK is not a human right; to rely on Article 8, you need to make a settlement application and we don't field questions about them here (That area belongs to Expats).

So with that clarification, what is appropriate in the domain of visitor visas is compassion. ECO's have a massively broad width of discretion when compassionate circumstances appear. The discretionary consideration kicks in when they read the person's premise, it's virtually 'automatic'. And contrary to what people may think they are not heartless ogres and people who qualify get the concession all the time. It's written in your refusal notice that the ECO treated your application as compassionate. Having a compassionate occasion, however, does not always result in success.

From the ECO's Guidance...

‘Where an entry clearance application does not meet the requirements of the Immigration Rules, the Entry Clearance Officer must consider whether there are exceptional circumstances or compassionate factors which mean the Home Office should consider granting entry clearance outside the Rules.

Source ECO's Guidance.

or at least refer the case to the ECM?

Refusals where there are compassionate circumstances are automatically referred to the ECM for review (or more formally the "Referred Casework Unit"). It's standard procedure and has already happened for you.

or grant me the right to appeal in case refused?

They are not going to do that no matter what. In the upper right corner of your refusal notice you will see "GV51 Visit (NRA)", and the "NRA" stands for "No Right of Appeal". If you were close or a borderline case they would have contacted you for an interview.

In addition to my very important work, do these constitute what they consider "strong ties to home country"?

No they do not. People can collect property income from anywhere in the world, they are not a binding factor. Wedding photos are of marginal help when the other evidence is really strong, they are not fundamental enabling documents. They want to see pay slips, bank statements, employment contracts, and evidence that indicates a stable lifestyle. The stuff you listed would not carry your application.


Just to repeat, they extended credibility to your sister-in-law as a person with the capacity for sponsorship. That part of the decision-making process was decided in your favour. They treated your application as a compassionate one and your refusal was examined by the higher ups. Accordingly, making a back-to-back fresh application right away would be misconceived without correcting everything (including the required translations to English or Welsh). If you apply again, they will, however, assign it to a different ECO so as to get a fresh take on your compassionate circumstances.

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  • @GayotFow About human rights, the UKVI has this publication dated April 2015 titled Considering Human Rights in Visit Applications. Is it no longer valid or what is it for?
    – S.E
    Commented Jan 24, 2017 at 19:08
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    @S.E that publication is still valid and still works. It's guidance on what to do if somebody actually tries to make a claim in a visit application. Like what the OP was contemplating. Or asylum claimants. Or those with pending HR claims for failed settlement applications. Read "The UK’s obligation in respect of human rights in the majority of cases only extends to safeguarding those rights within the UK. In most cases, an individual who is overseas will not succeed in arguing that the UK must act to prevent a breach of his or her human rights." Compassion, OTOH can and does work.
    – Gayot Fow
    Commented Jan 24, 2017 at 19:34
  • @GayotFow I've made some edits to my question. Will appreciate it if you can take a look.
    – S.E
    Commented Jan 25, 2017 at 21:42
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    @S.E I see your list of inclusions, it looks better but we cannot go over your list of items because that would extend into legal advice. You have to see a solicitor. But on balance you are starting to get the right idea.
    – Gayot Fow
    Commented Jan 25, 2017 at 23:14

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