Archive for the ‘Vietnam’ Category

No photo of Meeting: What to do?

December 9th, 2011 by Matchmaker | No Comments | Filed in Bone Fide Relationship, Evidence of relationship, Fiancee Visas, Ho Chi Minh City, K-1 Visa, K1, Vietnam

Comments: I met a lady who was a tour guide in The Mekong Delta for our group.  I did NOT have a photo taken of the two of us because I didn’t have a plan to bring her over here at that time.  Is it mandatory that I go BACK to The Mekong Delta in Vietnam to have ONE or more photos taken of us together?  This is NOT fraud…just circumstances as I would prefer to spend the air fare money to bring the lady here rather than for me to go back and forth myself.  Thanks for all the good work you do.  John 91320

The generic answer is, you could get the people who were on your tour to write affidavits and swear that you and her were on the tour together, and that they saw you spending time together. Such affidavits could be used in place of a photo to prove to prove you actually met in person.

The specific answer for Vietnam is: Vietnam is the most difficult post to get a fiancee visa from. The proof you must provide to have any chance of approval, is much more burdensome than just proving you and her were in the same place at the same time.

The HCM consulate reviewers expect you to make more than one trip, expect a long courtship before a proposal of marriage, and expect a formal engagement party, Vietnam style.

If you are serious about marrying this gal, or any gal from Vietnam you will have to put in time, effort and money.

Sorry to bring bad news, but I always tell clients  “like it really is”, even if it is not what they want to hear.

Assuming you choose to proceed (I can help you whether you take my advice more trips or ignore it)

Get more info at http://www.fianceevisaservices.com/


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How long before interview?

February 7th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Consulate Interviews, Fiancee Visas, I-129F, Vietnam

How long after submitting and I-129 fiance visa to immigration, will we find out when my fiance’s interview is?

First Homeland Security/FBI reviews your petition. This takes from 2 to 6 months.

Then they send the case to the consulate nearest to your Fiancee. Some consulates work faster than others. If he is in Philippines the process is very fast, with interviews arranged as fast as 3 to 5 weeks after Homeland Security approves. If he is in Vietnam it may be 2 to 4 months later.

Once he attends his interview the decision to grant the visa is made “on the spot”. If granted he gets his visa in a few days usually. Sometimes the consulate officer wishes to avoid confrontation, and does not tell denied applicants they are denied, instead telling them to come back later to obtain the results.

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Fiancee Visa Process is not for Beginners

December 19th, 2009 by admin | No Comments | Filed in China, Fiancee Visas, I-129F, Marriage Visa, Spousal Visas, Vietnam
I have helped clients successfully apply for their fiancee or spousal visas for many years. More and more of my clients today, come to me after being denied their visas, because they hired the wrong person to help them.

This process is always complicated. It is definitely NOT easy to do right the first time.  Mistakes made by NOT knowing HOW the system works, including not understanding the cultural idiosyncrasies prevalent at the particular consulate handling your case,  may COST you an extra YEAR of separation.  Getting my experienced help, is the best insurance you can get to avoid heartache and loneliness.

For example: Is your Fiancee From China or Vietnam? The BAD news is that China and Vietnam Marriage Visa petitions are forced to meet the highest standards I have seen. Extra effort is needed to prove that your engagement or even marriage (in the eyes of the local inspectors working in China or Vietnam) is genuine and “bona fide”.  The GOOD news is I AM an expert, I always go “beyond the call of duty”,  especially in helping my clients locate and demonstrate the proof needed to convince the most prejudiced local inspectors your petition should be granted.  I know how to deal with the toughest countries. See my blog on:  China applies Higher Standards Marriage Visas or Vietnam applies Stricter Standards for Marriage Visas

In fact,  1 in 10 of my clients  come to me AFTER their petitions were denied.  Sadly they already wasted time and money on expensive attorneys,  paying them  4 to 8 times my fees,  who did not really understand the unique procedures followed in each country, and  put minimal “fill in the blanks”  efforts, resulting in DENIAL of the petitions. These clients then come to me to salvage the situation, and apply the second time.  You can save time, money, and denial, by choosing to work with me, the FIRST TIME, and starting our  work together as early as possible so we can plan and implement a winning strategy..

With all due respect to my lazy competitiors, if you truly want your clients petition to be granted, there is much more involved in preparing a Fiancee or Spousal Visa petition then just filling in forms. To consistently get petitions approved, it takes extra and personal effort.

For a free strategy consultation go to: FianceeVisaServices.com

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Avoid having your Vietnam Fiancee Visa Denied

November 24th, 2009 by admin | 2 Comments | Filed in Consulate Interviews, Fiancee Visas, Ho Chi Minh City, I-129F, Vietnam

Getting Fiancee or spousal visas for Vietnam is much harder than from most other countries.

The consular officers in Ho Chi Minh City apply a higher standard before they accept that a relationship is genuine.

Like the consulate in China,  see my blog http://www.expertfianceevisas.com/?p=26 they expect a petitioner to have made multiple trips, to have had a long engagement, and to be able to communicate well with his fiancee (English no problem).

In addition they expect each petitioner to have celebrated a large, formal engagement party and banquet called “Dinh Hong” (but not on the first trip).

Some of their “official” reasons for denial are:

Photographs submitted as evidence of the relationship indicate that Petitioner and Fiancee have spent only four or five days together.

(This is their “code” what it really means is “only one trip = no visa”. If only one trip, it doesn’t matter how many photos you give)

It does not appear that the claimed relationship is continuous and on going. For example, Petitioner has not returned to visit Fiancee for one year.

Fiancee and-or Petitioner submitted evidence of only a small, inconsequential engagement ceremony without any US guest. This contradicts local social and cultural norms in which many family members and friends, including those in the US, are invited to engagement celebrations numbering in the hundreds of guests for families of even modest means.

In contrast to Vietnamese social and cultural norms which mandate a lengthy and careful period of pre-nuptial arrangements, Petitioner and Fiancee became engaged before meeting in person.

The decision to approve or deny is generally made by the consular officer before he meets with the Fiancee, before the interview. This is why taking the extra effort to make a complete and convincing petition at the start is essential to your success. If the officer has decided to deny, he will ask her detailed questions about the “proposal, the petitioners home town or the future wedding plans”. Any answer the Fiancee gives will not be “credible”.

Beneficiary’s chronology of the claimed relationship is not credible. For example, Fiancee can not recalled when Petitioner proposed to her.

Fiancee is unaware of basic facts regarding Petitioners location and or hometown (features, characteristics, etc). For example Fiancee was unaware of where Petitioner has lived for the past two years.

Fiancee is unaware of the exact wedding plans, what church, or venue, when the marriage would take place.

If these issues apply to you, to be successful you MUST remedy them prior to submitting your Petition.  And you MUST provide the supporting documents to irrefutably prove the remedies have occurred.  Many petitioners have their multiple trips and engagement party after the fiancee visa petition has been submitted, then bring proof of the trips, etc to the Fiancee’s consulate interview. They leave dumbfounded when finding that their Fiancee who attended the interview alone, but with all the documents, was not allowed to show the proof, instead was asked a few questions and left, denied due to the weak initial petition documentation.

Submit a stronger petition with more “proof of a genuine relationship”, UP FRONT.  Contrary to official statements, decisions to accept or deny a petition are often made early, prior to the interview, while the consular officer is reviewing your petition. The officer then asks pointed questions during the interview in order to justify the decision he has ALREADY made. Be sure to provide all proof of your genuine relationship “up front” in the petition.

See my youtube on proving a Genuine Relationship at

http://fianceevisaservices.com/youtubegenuinerelationship.html

Strategy to successfully petition:  Immediately take extra care to ensure that your “paper trail” is solid, and put at least two trips to meet her into your plans,  sign her up for English lessons if her conversational English is not good,  and celebrate your “Dinh Hong” during one of your trips.

If you are using a prepaid phone card make sure it provides you with itemized call records. These are the best proof that you are making regular and frequent contact. If your current phone card does not give you an itemized call logs
see http://fianceevisaservices.com/international-prepaid-long-distance.html

My petitions generally get approved faster than average. This is due to the professional way I assemble your petition package, including extensive, but very necessary efforts needed when applying for  a Vietnam fiancee, to prove the “bona fides” of your genuine committed relationship.

Click for Fiancee Visa Preparation Help

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