FilOz
6th April 2009, 12:19
I got my visa refusal today and first I just want to rant, so I apologize in advance and I would completely understand if you want to skip over the negative comments, so consider yourself warned that this post might bore and/or ruin your day with its lack of optimism. :Bricks:
Anyway, to give you a background, I am a Filipina working in Darwin, Australia as an IT Engineer. I met my boyfriend, a British national, in 2007 when we were both working in Singapore. We've been in a long distance relationship for over a year now, then last year he's finally decided to live with me in Australia this coming June...otherwise I would've sacrificed the laid-back lifestyle, and the warm, sunny weather just to be with him.
Since he's making the big move, we thought it might be a good idea for me to come over for a month, meet his family and friends so that they'll get their assurance that it's actually a lovely girl, not a witch, who's taking him away to the land of Oz...
And then the nightmare starts.
I apply online for the visit visa, flew all the way to Brisbane for my biometrics (since there's no embassy here in Darwin), and then sent the following documents:
- Letter from employer stating approved leave and that I'll be reemployed on my return
- Payslips
- Credit Card statement
- Plane tickets/flight itinerary
- Letter of invitation from boyfriend
- Boyfriend's credit card statement
- Photocopy of boyfriend's passport
I finally get the decision, after much worrying and incurring some serious expenses, just a few days before the trip - and it's a flat out REFUSAL due to the following reasons:
- Boyfriend refers to me as "partner" in the letter (my boyfriend used the word "partner" to imply that we are in a more serious relationship than the term "boyfriend" would) and yet there's no explanation as to why we choose to live in different countries and what our plans are for the future. >> boyfriend spats out that it's none of their business. Although I can't help but agree with him, I honestly had no idea that a simple visit visa would require this much detail in our relationship...they're even worse than a dad asking about someone's true intentions towards their daughter! :doh And why couldn't they have picked up the phone to ask me that?
- (A) Letter from employer states that I have worked for them since July 2007 when my Australian work visa was only issued in June 2008; and (B ) I did not arrive in Australia until December 2008 >> I have to admit that it was my mistake and that I should've watched out for these typical HR errors, but is it too much to expect that the clearance officer would have the common sense to realize that this would've been just a typo? Couldn't they have called my employer, which is a publicly-listed company to boot? I guess if they had much sense they would've also realized that the entry stamp they found in December 2008 was from a holiday I took then....and if they looked in the other pages they would've seen the June 2008 stamp as well.. :CompBuster:
- Not enough evidence of funds - not satisfied that I'll be able to maintain and accommodate myself without recourse to public funds or taking employment - my pay slips show an income of over AUD60k plus allowances and overtime, plus a seven grand of available credit limit, which I would've thought was enough to cover a month in the UK even if I had to split my boyfriend's rent. On top of that, even if I do NOT need it, my boyfriend also offered his financial support. Is living in the UK so expensive that I need more money than this? Plus, I think the UK wouldn't be so unlucky to have me in its workforce if I did have to resort to "taking employment". ;-)
I know it wasn't the perfect visa application and I admit that there are some inconsistencies, but nothing that could not have been cleared up by a simple phone call. It just feels like they've made their decision carelessly, that I have been stereotyped and that they've made up their minds the moment they've looked at my passport/nationality, and the reasons they've stated were an attempt to spot the most trivial inconsistencies that could warrant their refusal. It just saddens me that while I understand that abuse of this type of visa is commonplace in the UK Embassy in the Philippines, I guess I have hoped, in vain, that they would view me as an independent and self-sufficient professional here in Australia.
My regrets are:
That I should've sent them a very detailed essay about me and my boyfriend's love story explaining what the hell we're doing in a long distance relationship (something we have trouble answering ourselves) and that he's coming to live here...along with a few excerpts from Shakespeare's works...
I should've also included an essay about how Australia is the land of my dreams and I would never trade the crocodiles and kangaroos for rain and freezing weather (no offense to anyone - I'm just not built for to last anything other than a tropical climate)
That I should've allowed my American stepdad to adopt me so I wouldn't even NEED a visa to go anywhere (well, almost anywhere)
That I didn't feel so patriotic and should've stayed in the US long enough to get my citizenship - again, so I wouldn't be in this mess
That my mom should've given birth to me in American soil - or any other soil other than the infamous (but very beautiful) country called the Philippine Islands
That I should've come across this forum sooner. :Hellooo: I found a thread about how everyone suggested that a fiancee visa would've been a better option...in a case very similar to mine.
So should I apply for another visit visa or would I have better chances to apply for the fiancee visa? Even though I don't plan to live there anyway? I'm just concerned that if - by some miracle!! - I get granted a fiancee visa but we don't get married, this might cause problems if I plan to visit again...
:Help1: ?
Thanks in advance!
Anyway, to give you a background, I am a Filipina working in Darwin, Australia as an IT Engineer. I met my boyfriend, a British national, in 2007 when we were both working in Singapore. We've been in a long distance relationship for over a year now, then last year he's finally decided to live with me in Australia this coming June...otherwise I would've sacrificed the laid-back lifestyle, and the warm, sunny weather just to be with him.
Since he's making the big move, we thought it might be a good idea for me to come over for a month, meet his family and friends so that they'll get their assurance that it's actually a lovely girl, not a witch, who's taking him away to the land of Oz...
And then the nightmare starts.
I apply online for the visit visa, flew all the way to Brisbane for my biometrics (since there's no embassy here in Darwin), and then sent the following documents:
- Letter from employer stating approved leave and that I'll be reemployed on my return
- Payslips
- Credit Card statement
- Plane tickets/flight itinerary
- Letter of invitation from boyfriend
- Boyfriend's credit card statement
- Photocopy of boyfriend's passport
I finally get the decision, after much worrying and incurring some serious expenses, just a few days before the trip - and it's a flat out REFUSAL due to the following reasons:
- Boyfriend refers to me as "partner" in the letter (my boyfriend used the word "partner" to imply that we are in a more serious relationship than the term "boyfriend" would) and yet there's no explanation as to why we choose to live in different countries and what our plans are for the future. >> boyfriend spats out that it's none of their business. Although I can't help but agree with him, I honestly had no idea that a simple visit visa would require this much detail in our relationship...they're even worse than a dad asking about someone's true intentions towards their daughter! :doh And why couldn't they have picked up the phone to ask me that?
- (A) Letter from employer states that I have worked for them since July 2007 when my Australian work visa was only issued in June 2008; and (B ) I did not arrive in Australia until December 2008 >> I have to admit that it was my mistake and that I should've watched out for these typical HR errors, but is it too much to expect that the clearance officer would have the common sense to realize that this would've been just a typo? Couldn't they have called my employer, which is a publicly-listed company to boot? I guess if they had much sense they would've also realized that the entry stamp they found in December 2008 was from a holiday I took then....and if they looked in the other pages they would've seen the June 2008 stamp as well.. :CompBuster:
- Not enough evidence of funds - not satisfied that I'll be able to maintain and accommodate myself without recourse to public funds or taking employment - my pay slips show an income of over AUD60k plus allowances and overtime, plus a seven grand of available credit limit, which I would've thought was enough to cover a month in the UK even if I had to split my boyfriend's rent. On top of that, even if I do NOT need it, my boyfriend also offered his financial support. Is living in the UK so expensive that I need more money than this? Plus, I think the UK wouldn't be so unlucky to have me in its workforce if I did have to resort to "taking employment". ;-)
I know it wasn't the perfect visa application and I admit that there are some inconsistencies, but nothing that could not have been cleared up by a simple phone call. It just feels like they've made their decision carelessly, that I have been stereotyped and that they've made up their minds the moment they've looked at my passport/nationality, and the reasons they've stated were an attempt to spot the most trivial inconsistencies that could warrant their refusal. It just saddens me that while I understand that abuse of this type of visa is commonplace in the UK Embassy in the Philippines, I guess I have hoped, in vain, that they would view me as an independent and self-sufficient professional here in Australia.
My regrets are:
That I should've sent them a very detailed essay about me and my boyfriend's love story explaining what the hell we're doing in a long distance relationship (something we have trouble answering ourselves) and that he's coming to live here...along with a few excerpts from Shakespeare's works...
I should've also included an essay about how Australia is the land of my dreams and I would never trade the crocodiles and kangaroos for rain and freezing weather (no offense to anyone - I'm just not built for to last anything other than a tropical climate)
That I should've allowed my American stepdad to adopt me so I wouldn't even NEED a visa to go anywhere (well, almost anywhere)
That I didn't feel so patriotic and should've stayed in the US long enough to get my citizenship - again, so I wouldn't be in this mess
That my mom should've given birth to me in American soil - or any other soil other than the infamous (but very beautiful) country called the Philippine Islands
That I should've come across this forum sooner. :Hellooo: I found a thread about how everyone suggested that a fiancee visa would've been a better option...in a case very similar to mine.
So should I apply for another visit visa or would I have better chances to apply for the fiancee visa? Even though I don't plan to live there anyway? I'm just concerned that if - by some miracle!! - I get granted a fiancee visa but we don't get married, this might cause problems if I plan to visit again...
:Help1: ?
Thanks in advance!