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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> FO & ors (children: settlement, OM distinguished) Nigeria [2006] UKAIT 00089 (04 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2006/00089.html Cite as: [2006] UKAIT 00089, [2006] UKAIT 89 |
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FO & ors (children: settlement – OM distinguished) Nigeria [2006] UKAIT 00089
ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: 20th October 2006
Date Determination notified: 04 December 2006
Before
Senior Immigration Judge Batiste
Senior Immigration Judge McKee
Miss R.J. Emblin, JP
Between
F O & Ors | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
For the appellants : Mr M.A. Makinde, Solicitor
For the respondent : Mrs D. Cantrell, Senior Presenting Officer
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
The Tribunal's remarks in OM about the Immigration Rules relating to the settlement of children (paragraphs 296 to 316 of HC 395) are obiter, and are not to be taken as an authoritative interpretation of those rules. Thus, there is no requirement that when a child applies for a settlement visa, there must be presented a form of lawful consent from the child's carer or, failing that, a court order. Nor is there a requirement that a child coming for settlement here must be registered with the Social Services Department of the Local Authority where it is to reside.
"it is wholly reasonable and appropriate to require the sponsoring parent or relative to satisfy an Entry Clearance Officer or the SSHD that he or she has parental rights and that any surviving parent or person with parental rights has given his or her lawful consent to the removal of the child from the country of origin. Where such consent cannot be obtained or is unreasonably withheld, then a Sponsor should produce a court order dispensing with that consent. In circumstances where the infrastructure of a country was such that no courts or other legal/ customary law system were in existence, through which such an order might be obtained, then alternative means of demonstrating lawful removal would need to be considered."
(a) both parents are present and settled here ;
(b) one parent lives here and the other is dead ;
(c) the parent here has had sole responsibility ;
(d) the child is to stay with a parent or another relative, and its exclusion would be undesirable.
DECISION
No error of law having been identified, the immigration judge's determination allowing the appeal is ordered to stand.
Senior Immigration Judge McKee
24 October 2006