Updates, commentary, training and advice on immigration and asylum law

What is the “Legacy?”

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Is it a bird, is it a plane or…is it in fact a policy?  Now the UKBA would vigorously deny this, they would deny that there is any kind of amnesty at all.

However, the evidence would point to the contrary.

Essentially prior to July 2011 if you had claimed asylum before the 5th March 2007 and your case was regarded as “unresolved” ie there is still some action pending; you would get a response on your case. A grant of Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) would usually follow, or you would be removed. The majority of such decision making usually led to a grant of ILR.

Now one may well wonder what the criteria for such a grant is…and that is where we have been left slightly bemused.

There is obviously some kind of criteria in order to enable caseworkers at UKBA to either reject or accept a claim under the legacy. However, we are being asked to believe that considerations of such cases, even despite long residence (which seems to be the underlying theme) are case specific….random some may well think.

If some applicants are granted leave and other similar cases are not and inherently there is no justification does this not smack of arbitrariness? One wonders therefore whether the right hand knows what the left hand is actually doing.

What does seem to be apparent is that legal challenges in this area do now seem to be taken seriously. There are many ways to scrutinise the decision of the UKBA to refuse a case under the legacy; a refusal of ILR, delay in the consideration of case or the decision to grant Discretionary Leave (DL) rather than ILR, are just some of the legal challenges in the Administrative court at present. There is a test case due to be heard substantively at the Administrative Court on the 2nd and 3rd July. Watch this space…

Interested in refugee law? You might like Colin's book, imaginatively called "Refugee Law" and published by Bristol University Press.

Communicating important legal concepts in an approachable way, this is an essential guide for students, lawyers and non-specialists alike.

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Comments

8 Responses

  1. I wonder if it’s because the UKBA do not have enough Decision Makers.

    If that’s the case, Mrs May’s family route changes will increase visa applications on the mere fact that to reach ILR now takes 2 to 5 UK based applications, up from 1 to 3 previously.

  2. @Paul – test case is Hiwa Hakemi – CO/304/2011 but NOT about granting DLR, just about granting leave

  3. Hakemi & Ors. No this is not on the DL point. I actually got permission on this basis and the failure to grant ILR on a different permission application

  4. In relation to permission on refusal to grant ILR was that on the basis that the case hadn’t been “concluded”?

  5. I saw that the government is now thinking about changing the state of students to manipulate the net immigration figures. I personally wouldn’t class a student as an immigrant but there is a heated debate whether the UN classification is good enough for us (The UK) or not.

    I think that the UKBA is a little slow to react in general and has far too much red tape to be effective. Nice informative post though.

  6. whats happened to the cases in high court on 2nd and 3rd of july 2012.??????