Family's relief after immigration row 'victory'

Hugo in a dark olive T-shirt with his arms around his sons Luca, in a grey and yellow patterned T-shirt, and Guilherme in a white polo shirt, in a park in Exeter.
Image caption,

Hugo and his sons Luca and Guilherme believe they will now all be able to stay in the UK

  • Published

An 11-year-old boy from Exeter who was told by the Home Office he would have to move to his native Brazil should now be able to stay in the UK after a bureaucratic battle.

In its original email to Guilherme, the Home Office said moving to Brazil after six years in England "may involve a degree of disruption to family life" but this was "proportionate to the legitimate aim of maintaining effective immigration control".

Guilherme's parents, an NHS nurse and a university lecturer who came to the UK legally with their children in 2019, said they had feared what it might also mean for their other son Luca, eight.

The Home Office has now agreed to "exceptionally reconsider" the family's case.

A head and shoulders image of Ana who has long, dark hair and is wearing a black top underneath a black jacket. She is sitting in a living room and there are various house plants on shelves in the background. She has a serious expression on her face.
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Ana said she was devastated when the first letter from the Home Office arrived

The boys' father, Hugo, who has indefinite leave to remain in the UK, had appealed for the same visa for his sons.

A Home Office email addressed to primary school pupil Guilherme in June said: "I am satisfied that there are no serious or compelling reasons to grant you settlement.

"I am satisfied that you could return to Brazil and continue your education in Brazil where you would have the option to attend an English-speaking school."

Speaking before the Home Office reconsidered her family's case, the boys' mother, Ana, said: "In the beginning it was like the floor just opened for me - I couldn't understand what it meant".

She said her sons told her they did not want to go to Brazil and they wanted to keep their friends at a school they enjoyed.

Ana said: "We pay taxes every month and we do everything correctly and then suddenly we have this with our children - the most precious thing in our lives.

"It just makes you feel like nothing."

Hugo in a dark olive T-shirt and Ana in a black top with their sons Luca (centre) in a grey and yellow patterned T-shirt and Guilherme (seated) in a white polo shirt with a kitchen in the background. All four of them have serious expressions.
Image caption,

Hugo and Ana with their sons Luca (centre) and Guilherme

Hugo and Ana separated in 2022 and they said the separation - and their different stages in the immigration process - had led to the issues with the Home Office.

The family arrived in the UK in 2019 with Hugo on a skilled worker visa due to his job as a a senior lecturer in computer science at the University of Exeter.

He was granted indefinite leave to remain in 2024.

Ana gained a skilled worker visa in 2022 after starting work as a nurse at the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital but will only be eligible for indefinite leave to remain after five years.

The original Home Office email said both parents should be granted settlement at the same time, or be settled or a British citizen, unless one parent has sole responsibility for the children.

Hugo in a dark olive T-shirt sitting on a bench that is part of a wooden structure in a park in Exeter. He has dark hair and a beard that is flecked with some grey and he is wearing glasses. Hugo has a serious expression on his face.
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Hugo says the experience has been 'mentally draining and exhausting'

The Home Office said it would refund the cost of the original visa applications - about £3,000 per child - and allow a new application for both children as dependants of a skilled worker.

Hugo spoke of his huge relief at the decision but said changes needed to be made.

He said the experience had been "mentally draining and exhausting" but he and his family were now "excited for the future".

He added: "The most appalling issue was the fact they wrote a very tough and somewhat threatening letter to a young child.

"The other issue is their rules don't seem to be fit for purpose in a scenario where you have different family arrangements."

A smiling Steve Race in a blue shirt and a grey suit jacket standing on the quay in Exeter with the river to the right.
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Steve Race, the Labour MP for Exeter, took up the family's case with the Home Office

Steve Race, the Labour MP for Exeter, argued the family's case with the Home Office and said there were "lessons to be learned" from the family's situation.

"When you've got cases that are slightly more nuanced, slightly more complicated, the Home Office needs to have processes in place to make sure they do look at what's going on with the family in the round and they don't put families through this process with all of the fear, stress and concern this has meant," he said.

Race said the country needed "safe and secure borders" but also needed to treat families "who are here legally and correctly" in "the right way and with respect".

The Home Office declined to comment on the case or the issues raised by the MP.

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