By the way thank you all for your quick replies, I really was not expecting such a fast response.. I appreciate it!
Maybe it shows just how busy some of us really are !!!!!!
By the way thank you all for your quick replies, I really was not expecting such a fast response.. I appreciate it!
Maybe it shows just how busy some of us really are !!!!!!
From what I have been told its common practice to falsify documents in pinas with the collaboration of a duplicitous lawyer,money talks,but in the case of the lady I know no immigration official in his right mind,nor consular staff either would believe a 50+ year old lady landed in Pinas and gave birth in less than a week,I dont know the full story,I just know her "Daughter" still isnt in the UK after 5 years
Sometimes you're flush and sometimes you're bust, and when you're up, it's never as good as it seems, and when you're down, you never think you'll be up again. But life goes on.
The beauty of a woman is not in the clothes she wears, the figure that she carries, or the way she combs her hair. The beauty of a woman is seen in her eyes, because that is the doorway to her heart, the place where love resides. True beauty in a woman is reflected in her soul. It's the passion that she shows to the outside world.
problems is your g/f's passport, where was she when the baby was born in the phils, in the uk ? , and is a father mentioned on the birth cert?
it wouldn't take an Einstein to realise your g/f could not be the mother, if they looked at her passport, and realised she was never in the phils when the birth happened.thou you never know, you could get away with it
if you apply for a visa using the British immigration rules or even using a EEA family permit, if the embassy get suspicious they can ask for a DNA test, but that's only a small chance they would.
thou if i was her, i would apply for a family permit for the baby, cost nothing, less hassle than using the British immigration rules.
I agree with you I don't think we should risk this chance by lieing about my partner being the birth mother, She was not in the country at the time the baby was born that much will be instantly obvious.
I think I will see if my partner knows any one she can get legal advice from in the Philippines, my only worry now is that I have heard adoption from the Philippines may not be an option for a while as we are not married yet and I believe that being married for two years is a requirement and its a very long expensive process....but even saying that I guess the ultimate goal will definitely make it worth any bureaucratic red tape and hassle.
Barry
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