My girlfriend's mother called the police to ban me from getting into the country [closed]












2















So I've been dating this girl for over a year now (she's from the uk) and we were planning on meeting and getting married so I could join her, but her mother had called the police and she says she's gonna call a lawyer and try to do everything she can to stop me from getting there (because she's so racist towards me) so my question is, can she actually do that? Especially that there's no proof that I'm involved in any crime activities or anything that normally gets you banned from getting into a country.










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closed as unclear what you're asking by Dirty-flow, Michael Seifert, Giorgio, Dmitry Grigoryev, bytebuster Mar 7 at 15:43


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • 1





    Under what permission are you entering the UK?

    – CMaster
    Mar 7 at 13:36











  • Is she a minor ? This might not be relevant but still then. Can she support herself financially ? After getting married do you want to settle in UK ? If yes then the question of financial support becomes an issue.

    – DumbCoder
    Mar 7 at 13:36








  • 2





    How often have you met before? Does one of you intend to immigrate into the other's country? Are there any facts about your circumstance that we should know?

    – Harper
    Mar 7 at 13:55








  • 6





    @Khaled IMHO I doubt you need to worry about whether you’ll be banned based on a call by your prospective mother-in-law to Immigration. If you need your online ‘girlfriend’ to sponsor your visa application in any shape or form, rather than being able to prove that you are eligible and qualify IN YOUR OWN RIGHT, it’s highly unlikely that you’d be given any kind of visa based on a ‘relationship’ with someone you’ve never met in person. At the very least you’d need a history of her visiting you. And yes, your MIL can blow the whistle gov.uk/report-immigration-crime

    – Traveller
    Mar 7 at 14:35








  • 3





    Khaled -- you probably need to change your plans anyway. As a visitor to the UK (so a normal visitor visa, or a visa-free entry from a country that is allowed that), you are not allowed to get married in the UK. And even once you are married, your partner needs to be earning at least £18,600 per year, and that is due to go up soon.

    – CMaster
    Mar 7 at 14:56


















2















So I've been dating this girl for over a year now (she's from the uk) and we were planning on meeting and getting married so I could join her, but her mother had called the police and she says she's gonna call a lawyer and try to do everything she can to stop me from getting there (because she's so racist towards me) so my question is, can she actually do that? Especially that there's no proof that I'm involved in any crime activities or anything that normally gets you banned from getting into a country.










share|improve this question













closed as unclear what you're asking by Dirty-flow, Michael Seifert, Giorgio, Dmitry Grigoryev, bytebuster Mar 7 at 15:43


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • 1





    Under what permission are you entering the UK?

    – CMaster
    Mar 7 at 13:36











  • Is she a minor ? This might not be relevant but still then. Can she support herself financially ? After getting married do you want to settle in UK ? If yes then the question of financial support becomes an issue.

    – DumbCoder
    Mar 7 at 13:36








  • 2





    How often have you met before? Does one of you intend to immigrate into the other's country? Are there any facts about your circumstance that we should know?

    – Harper
    Mar 7 at 13:55








  • 6





    @Khaled IMHO I doubt you need to worry about whether you’ll be banned based on a call by your prospective mother-in-law to Immigration. If you need your online ‘girlfriend’ to sponsor your visa application in any shape or form, rather than being able to prove that you are eligible and qualify IN YOUR OWN RIGHT, it’s highly unlikely that you’d be given any kind of visa based on a ‘relationship’ with someone you’ve never met in person. At the very least you’d need a history of her visiting you. And yes, your MIL can blow the whistle gov.uk/report-immigration-crime

    – Traveller
    Mar 7 at 14:35








  • 3





    Khaled -- you probably need to change your plans anyway. As a visitor to the UK (so a normal visitor visa, or a visa-free entry from a country that is allowed that), you are not allowed to get married in the UK. And even once you are married, your partner needs to be earning at least £18,600 per year, and that is due to go up soon.

    – CMaster
    Mar 7 at 14:56
















2












2








2








So I've been dating this girl for over a year now (she's from the uk) and we were planning on meeting and getting married so I could join her, but her mother had called the police and she says she's gonna call a lawyer and try to do everything she can to stop me from getting there (because she's so racist towards me) so my question is, can she actually do that? Especially that there's no proof that I'm involved in any crime activities or anything that normally gets you banned from getting into a country.










share|improve this question














So I've been dating this girl for over a year now (she's from the uk) and we were planning on meeting and getting married so I could join her, but her mother had called the police and she says she's gonna call a lawyer and try to do everything she can to stop me from getting there (because she's so racist towards me) so my question is, can she actually do that? Especially that there's no proof that I'm involved in any crime activities or anything that normally gets you banned from getting into a country.







visas uk weddings






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asked Mar 7 at 13:22









KhaledKhaled

172




172




closed as unclear what you're asking by Dirty-flow, Michael Seifert, Giorgio, Dmitry Grigoryev, bytebuster Mar 7 at 15:43


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









closed as unclear what you're asking by Dirty-flow, Michael Seifert, Giorgio, Dmitry Grigoryev, bytebuster Mar 7 at 15:43


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 1





    Under what permission are you entering the UK?

    – CMaster
    Mar 7 at 13:36











  • Is she a minor ? This might not be relevant but still then. Can she support herself financially ? After getting married do you want to settle in UK ? If yes then the question of financial support becomes an issue.

    – DumbCoder
    Mar 7 at 13:36








  • 2





    How often have you met before? Does one of you intend to immigrate into the other's country? Are there any facts about your circumstance that we should know?

    – Harper
    Mar 7 at 13:55








  • 6





    @Khaled IMHO I doubt you need to worry about whether you’ll be banned based on a call by your prospective mother-in-law to Immigration. If you need your online ‘girlfriend’ to sponsor your visa application in any shape or form, rather than being able to prove that you are eligible and qualify IN YOUR OWN RIGHT, it’s highly unlikely that you’d be given any kind of visa based on a ‘relationship’ with someone you’ve never met in person. At the very least you’d need a history of her visiting you. And yes, your MIL can blow the whistle gov.uk/report-immigration-crime

    – Traveller
    Mar 7 at 14:35








  • 3





    Khaled -- you probably need to change your plans anyway. As a visitor to the UK (so a normal visitor visa, or a visa-free entry from a country that is allowed that), you are not allowed to get married in the UK. And even once you are married, your partner needs to be earning at least £18,600 per year, and that is due to go up soon.

    – CMaster
    Mar 7 at 14:56
















  • 1





    Under what permission are you entering the UK?

    – CMaster
    Mar 7 at 13:36











  • Is she a minor ? This might not be relevant but still then. Can she support herself financially ? After getting married do you want to settle in UK ? If yes then the question of financial support becomes an issue.

    – DumbCoder
    Mar 7 at 13:36








  • 2





    How often have you met before? Does one of you intend to immigrate into the other's country? Are there any facts about your circumstance that we should know?

    – Harper
    Mar 7 at 13:55








  • 6





    @Khaled IMHO I doubt you need to worry about whether you’ll be banned based on a call by your prospective mother-in-law to Immigration. If you need your online ‘girlfriend’ to sponsor your visa application in any shape or form, rather than being able to prove that you are eligible and qualify IN YOUR OWN RIGHT, it’s highly unlikely that you’d be given any kind of visa based on a ‘relationship’ with someone you’ve never met in person. At the very least you’d need a history of her visiting you. And yes, your MIL can blow the whistle gov.uk/report-immigration-crime

    – Traveller
    Mar 7 at 14:35








  • 3





    Khaled -- you probably need to change your plans anyway. As a visitor to the UK (so a normal visitor visa, or a visa-free entry from a country that is allowed that), you are not allowed to get married in the UK. And even once you are married, your partner needs to be earning at least £18,600 per year, and that is due to go up soon.

    – CMaster
    Mar 7 at 14:56










1




1





Under what permission are you entering the UK?

– CMaster
Mar 7 at 13:36





Under what permission are you entering the UK?

– CMaster
Mar 7 at 13:36













Is she a minor ? This might not be relevant but still then. Can she support herself financially ? After getting married do you want to settle in UK ? If yes then the question of financial support becomes an issue.

– DumbCoder
Mar 7 at 13:36







Is she a minor ? This might not be relevant but still then. Can she support herself financially ? After getting married do you want to settle in UK ? If yes then the question of financial support becomes an issue.

– DumbCoder
Mar 7 at 13:36






2




2





How often have you met before? Does one of you intend to immigrate into the other's country? Are there any facts about your circumstance that we should know?

– Harper
Mar 7 at 13:55







How often have you met before? Does one of you intend to immigrate into the other's country? Are there any facts about your circumstance that we should know?

– Harper
Mar 7 at 13:55






6




6





@Khaled IMHO I doubt you need to worry about whether you’ll be banned based on a call by your prospective mother-in-law to Immigration. If you need your online ‘girlfriend’ to sponsor your visa application in any shape or form, rather than being able to prove that you are eligible and qualify IN YOUR OWN RIGHT, it’s highly unlikely that you’d be given any kind of visa based on a ‘relationship’ with someone you’ve never met in person. At the very least you’d need a history of her visiting you. And yes, your MIL can blow the whistle gov.uk/report-immigration-crime

– Traveller
Mar 7 at 14:35







@Khaled IMHO I doubt you need to worry about whether you’ll be banned based on a call by your prospective mother-in-law to Immigration. If you need your online ‘girlfriend’ to sponsor your visa application in any shape or form, rather than being able to prove that you are eligible and qualify IN YOUR OWN RIGHT, it’s highly unlikely that you’d be given any kind of visa based on a ‘relationship’ with someone you’ve never met in person. At the very least you’d need a history of her visiting you. And yes, your MIL can blow the whistle gov.uk/report-immigration-crime

– Traveller
Mar 7 at 14:35






3




3





Khaled -- you probably need to change your plans anyway. As a visitor to the UK (so a normal visitor visa, or a visa-free entry from a country that is allowed that), you are not allowed to get married in the UK. And even once you are married, your partner needs to be earning at least £18,600 per year, and that is due to go up soon.

– CMaster
Mar 7 at 14:56







Khaled -- you probably need to change your plans anyway. As a visitor to the UK (so a normal visitor visa, or a visa-free entry from a country that is allowed that), you are not allowed to get married in the UK. And even once you are married, your partner needs to be earning at least £18,600 per year, and that is due to go up soon.

– CMaster
Mar 7 at 14:56












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















15















can she actually do that?




Of course she can. Anyone call the police for anything. The more relevant question is "what happens if she does?"



That really depends on the details: what is she saying to the police, what's your legal status in the UK, where are you from, is your girl friend a minor, have you done anything that could jeopardize your legal status?



In general your girlfriend's mother is a third party and has no impact on your legal standing in the UK, unless she has material evidence that would impact this. If she says "there is a foreign guy who wants to date my 25 year old daughter and I don't like this, so please arrest him", she will be ignored. If she says "there is a 30 year old foreign convicted drug dealer who wants to hook up with my 15 year old daughter, please help" they will almost certainly engage.






share|improve this answer



















  • 18





    Your first line reminds me of Henry IV, Part I: "GLENDOWER. I can call spirits from the vasty deep. / HOTSPUR. Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them?"

    – Michael Seifert
    Mar 7 at 14:14











  • @MichaelSeifert Ha! Shakespeare was the original trolling pedant...

    – Oscar Bravo
    Mar 7 at 15:23











  • if the mom is reading your answer....now she dont need any lawyer now. lol

    – N Randhawa
    Mar 9 at 4:01


















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









15















can she actually do that?




Of course she can. Anyone call the police for anything. The more relevant question is "what happens if she does?"



That really depends on the details: what is she saying to the police, what's your legal status in the UK, where are you from, is your girl friend a minor, have you done anything that could jeopardize your legal status?



In general your girlfriend's mother is a third party and has no impact on your legal standing in the UK, unless she has material evidence that would impact this. If she says "there is a foreign guy who wants to date my 25 year old daughter and I don't like this, so please arrest him", she will be ignored. If she says "there is a 30 year old foreign convicted drug dealer who wants to hook up with my 15 year old daughter, please help" they will almost certainly engage.






share|improve this answer



















  • 18





    Your first line reminds me of Henry IV, Part I: "GLENDOWER. I can call spirits from the vasty deep. / HOTSPUR. Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them?"

    – Michael Seifert
    Mar 7 at 14:14











  • @MichaelSeifert Ha! Shakespeare was the original trolling pedant...

    – Oscar Bravo
    Mar 7 at 15:23











  • if the mom is reading your answer....now she dont need any lawyer now. lol

    – N Randhawa
    Mar 9 at 4:01
















15















can she actually do that?




Of course she can. Anyone call the police for anything. The more relevant question is "what happens if she does?"



That really depends on the details: what is she saying to the police, what's your legal status in the UK, where are you from, is your girl friend a minor, have you done anything that could jeopardize your legal status?



In general your girlfriend's mother is a third party and has no impact on your legal standing in the UK, unless she has material evidence that would impact this. If she says "there is a foreign guy who wants to date my 25 year old daughter and I don't like this, so please arrest him", she will be ignored. If she says "there is a 30 year old foreign convicted drug dealer who wants to hook up with my 15 year old daughter, please help" they will almost certainly engage.






share|improve this answer



















  • 18





    Your first line reminds me of Henry IV, Part I: "GLENDOWER. I can call spirits from the vasty deep. / HOTSPUR. Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them?"

    – Michael Seifert
    Mar 7 at 14:14











  • @MichaelSeifert Ha! Shakespeare was the original trolling pedant...

    – Oscar Bravo
    Mar 7 at 15:23











  • if the mom is reading your answer....now she dont need any lawyer now. lol

    – N Randhawa
    Mar 9 at 4:01














15












15








15








can she actually do that?




Of course she can. Anyone call the police for anything. The more relevant question is "what happens if she does?"



That really depends on the details: what is she saying to the police, what's your legal status in the UK, where are you from, is your girl friend a minor, have you done anything that could jeopardize your legal status?



In general your girlfriend's mother is a third party and has no impact on your legal standing in the UK, unless she has material evidence that would impact this. If she says "there is a foreign guy who wants to date my 25 year old daughter and I don't like this, so please arrest him", she will be ignored. If she says "there is a 30 year old foreign convicted drug dealer who wants to hook up with my 15 year old daughter, please help" they will almost certainly engage.






share|improve this answer














can she actually do that?




Of course she can. Anyone call the police for anything. The more relevant question is "what happens if she does?"



That really depends on the details: what is she saying to the police, what's your legal status in the UK, where are you from, is your girl friend a minor, have you done anything that could jeopardize your legal status?



In general your girlfriend's mother is a third party and has no impact on your legal standing in the UK, unless she has material evidence that would impact this. If she says "there is a foreign guy who wants to date my 25 year old daughter and I don't like this, so please arrest him", she will be ignored. If she says "there is a 30 year old foreign convicted drug dealer who wants to hook up with my 15 year old daughter, please help" they will almost certainly engage.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Mar 7 at 13:45









HilmarHilmar

22.6k13772




22.6k13772








  • 18





    Your first line reminds me of Henry IV, Part I: "GLENDOWER. I can call spirits from the vasty deep. / HOTSPUR. Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them?"

    – Michael Seifert
    Mar 7 at 14:14











  • @MichaelSeifert Ha! Shakespeare was the original trolling pedant...

    – Oscar Bravo
    Mar 7 at 15:23











  • if the mom is reading your answer....now she dont need any lawyer now. lol

    – N Randhawa
    Mar 9 at 4:01














  • 18





    Your first line reminds me of Henry IV, Part I: "GLENDOWER. I can call spirits from the vasty deep. / HOTSPUR. Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them?"

    – Michael Seifert
    Mar 7 at 14:14











  • @MichaelSeifert Ha! Shakespeare was the original trolling pedant...

    – Oscar Bravo
    Mar 7 at 15:23











  • if the mom is reading your answer....now she dont need any lawyer now. lol

    – N Randhawa
    Mar 9 at 4:01








18




18





Your first line reminds me of Henry IV, Part I: "GLENDOWER. I can call spirits from the vasty deep. / HOTSPUR. Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them?"

– Michael Seifert
Mar 7 at 14:14





Your first line reminds me of Henry IV, Part I: "GLENDOWER. I can call spirits from the vasty deep. / HOTSPUR. Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them?"

– Michael Seifert
Mar 7 at 14:14













@MichaelSeifert Ha! Shakespeare was the original trolling pedant...

– Oscar Bravo
Mar 7 at 15:23





@MichaelSeifert Ha! Shakespeare was the original trolling pedant...

– Oscar Bravo
Mar 7 at 15:23













if the mom is reading your answer....now she dont need any lawyer now. lol

– N Randhawa
Mar 9 at 4:01





if the mom is reading your answer....now she dont need any lawyer now. lol

– N Randhawa
Mar 9 at 4:01



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