What Are The Chances Of Being Allowed Back If You Overstay Your Hong Kong Visa And Are Then Convicted Of That Crime?
Posted in Musing, Refusals & Appeals, The Hong Kong Visa Geeza, Visitor Visas /
It is NEVER a good idea to overstay your Hong Kong visa for the reasons set out below…
QUESTION
I previously overstayed my Visitor visa for a period of 13 months; I reported to the Immigration Department, was charged and at Sha Tin court I was convicted and given a suspended sentence of 6 months. I bought my air ticket and I was allowed to leave Hong Kong on my own without being formally deported.
This was in June 2008.
Later I tried to return to Hong Kong in 2009 but at the airport I was refused entry and I was told by an Immigration Officer that I can apply for a visa before coming to Hong Kong, as a visa on arrival is not available in my case.
I submitted my Visitor visa application through a friend of mine (who is a permanent resident of Hong Kong) but my application was refused.
2 years later (that is in 2011) I applied again for a Visitor visa via the same sponsor and once again my application was refused.
I wrote an email to the Immigration Department asking if I was blacklisted from entering Hong Kong.
I was told I am not blacklisted, yet my applications keep being rejected.
Can you kindly suggest any measures that I can take to apply successfully for a Visitor visa? I have a local sponsor in Hong Kong and any information/suggestion from you will be of immense help.
ANSWER
Yes, your situation is rather unfortunate as you are appreciating because it’s seven or eight years now since you overstayed your visa in Hong Kong and faced justice for doing that. And as you’ve clearly appreciated, there are costs and penalties to pay for not complying with Hong Kong immigration law, which I think all too many people, frankly, don’t take seriously.
Hong Kong is a great place and you may indeed wish to come back in the future. And as you’re discovering, oversaying whilst gets your time on the ground, in the immediate sense, it is in a sense kind of like, you know, mortgaging your future and your ability to be able to come back to Hong Kong. So it is very unfortunate.
Getting really down to the heart of it, if the Immigration Department have told you there is no blacklist, then that probably is technically accurate. However, each time that you make an application for a visa, the examining officer is going to take into account all the circumstances of your application and if they can see that you did have history of overstaying and indeed were convicted for that and then you departed, normally there isn’t any hurry on the part of the Immigration Department to let you back in because they can’t see any upside. So I’m afraid there’s not much you can do about it; you’re just bearing the cost and consequence of something that you have in your past. And, as these things can very often do, they can come back to haunt you.
I’m afraid that’s what’s happening to you now. So you never know. Just keep on making your applications. One day you might get lucky; but for the moment, I would imagine that the Immigration Department are not particularly interested in having you back.
Okay, I realise that’s not what you hoped to hear, but essentially,that’s the position that you’re in.
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