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U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer / I Am A U.S. Consular Officer: Ask Me Your Visa Questions. / Likely Questions By Usa Consular During Interview For Tourist Visa And Response (2) (3) (4)
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Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by Bambamzzzz: 1:52pm On Oct 14, 2014 |
Bambamzzzz: |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by tayoamos: 2:55pm On Oct 14, 2014 |
Dear vo, I have a valid b1b2 visa and will expire in 2016. Visited USA twice already, but I just realised I will like to run my masters in the USA. Considering that my current b1b2 will expire in 2016. How can I go about an f1 visa to study? Can I apply for it from here in abuja despite the fact that I have a valid b1b2 visa |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by tebohst(m): 9:00pm On Oct 14, 2014 |
VisaOfficer:Hi Visa Officer. I need your assistance. My fiancee is a DV 2015 selectee from Cameroon with CN 19***. Recently, the person whose address we provided on DS260 told us that USCIS called and asked her to pay $200 for a background check on her. Please does that ever happen? Everyone I talked to has never heard of such a think. What about you? Thanks. |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by justwise(m): 9:26pm On Oct 14, 2014 |
tebohst: Email: LagosIV@state.gov, before making any payment. I'm not sure when VO will log on here again. 1 Like |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by Joboms(m): 12:20am On Oct 15, 2014 |
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Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by Nobody: 1:15pm On Oct 15, 2014 |
justwise: Oh dear! |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by uddy101(f): 6:38pm On Oct 15, 2014 |
Good day All, wat does it take for to relocate to the US or Canada. I mean in terms of visa. What are the requirements. Thank you. |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by eagle13(m): 9:43am On Oct 16, 2014 |
Hello VO glad to have u here.I have an event to attend in d US which has been paid for including d visa fee but I can't get an appointment date b4 d event wat can I do?n d event is coming up on d 25-28 of this month. your advice is urgently needed pls |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by hollykomz(m): 11:05am On Oct 16, 2014 |
Morning VO, Please I want to ask for information on CR1/IR1 visa. My case is documentarily completed at NVC and my documents are already been sent to your office for interview 3days ago. 1.Please how many days/weeks will it take to schedule interview after you received the package? 2.how many days/weeks will it take to have the interview after I received letter of interview from your office? 3.Please can I have my interview by November 2014? if not please when? Thank You. |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by Joboms(m): 8:21am On Oct 17, 2014 |
. 1 Like |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by matador22: 6:13pm On Oct 17, 2014 |
What will happen if I already have a visa to enter to the US but I was in the US previously, can someone report me? |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by gabriellle: 8:20pm On Oct 20, 2014 |
Dear VO, I have applied for an immigrant visa for my mother and we are nowhere near completing the process; AOS and Civil documents are still under review at the NVC. However, because of health reasons, (having a C-Section next week), I was wondering if we can apply for a B1/B2 visa for her to come temporarily to help me when I have the baby. Will this be feasible? I have read its really hard to get a visitor visa when an IV visa is pending but I really need her assistance as I will be alone with the baby. Can this visa fall under the emergency health reason category? Please let me know what to do. Thank you very much. Best, Gabriellle |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by imhassan: 10:37pm On Oct 20, 2014 |
hello sir , thank u very much for helping us , i have a question please , my visa type is CR1 and during my interview the officer told me im approved ,but cant issue your visa until u send me a joint sponsor , and put me in administration process too , so i barley got a joint sponsor , his income up to 80,000$ annually ,so my question is that does the embassy run a credit check or not ? just his credit is messy a little bit and if they wont accept him so does the embassy will give me anther chance to find anther one or just refuse the case ? and thank u very much for your time . |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by smokey12345: 12:03am On Oct 21, 2014 |
Hello, Id love to present my case.. I get married to an american citizen which is a white lady January this year but she has not been working for the past 3 years because of her mums health so its not easy for her to be my sponsor so as to apply for immigrant Visa..I am an Architect but i work on a contract basis with 2 companies but the salary for the 2 companies amounts to 1.5million naira annually besides that i have my own personal freelance works but they always pay me with checks. Do you think with that i can easily apply for Tourist/ visit so as to see her and maybe then there is something we can do when i get there.. Thanks 1 Like |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by ladyennie: 9:15am On Oct 21, 2014 |
Please am a business lady, traveled to neighbouring countries few times and also to dubai 2 times, feels like going to the US only for 2 weeks break by February, please any advice on the procedures and all documents I will be needing, because 2 yrs ago when I applied I was denied although then I have never been to dubai. Thanks |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 11:48am On Oct 21, 2014 |
Hi everyone, Sorry about the silence last week - I was having log-in problems. I'll answer everyone's questions, starting with the earliest and working my way to the present. Thank you for your patience! Here we go..... 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 11:50am On Oct 21, 2014 |
printemps: Greetings and apologies for the late reply! Yes, the contact sheets were received. Thank you so much! |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 11:54am On Oct 21, 2014 |
desiJatt: Greetings! The chances of being issued an immigrant visa after the I-130 petition are very high. For biological relationships (parents, children, siblings), as long as you're really related and don't have any ineligibilities, you'll likely receive a visa. For spouse and fiance relationships, you do have to convince the officer that the relationship is bona fide, but even then, the majority of applicants do receive visas. Sending a petition back with a recommendation for revocation happens frequently, but considering we're the busiest Consular post in Africa, the overall percentage of returns is actually lower than at many other posts. |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:03pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
goodmaya: Hello and apologies for the tardy reply. You can have two petitions going at the same time. The K (fiance) visa is generally much faster than the F1, and it's completely legal to immigrate to the U.S. as a fiancee and get married while you have an I-130 (F1) petition pending. If for any reason the marriage doesn't work out, then you still have the I-130 waiting for you. Marriage would change you from an F1 to an F3 as far as your parents' petition for you is concerned, but you'd go back to an F1 if you got divorced, which I hope for your sake is not what happens. So even if the marriage didn't work out, it wouldn't make you lose your place in line for the other petition. (Technically, if you're issued a K1, someone somewhere ought to notice eventually that you have an F1 petition out there and administratively close it at some point; but that takes so long to happen that, frankly, yeah, I wouldn't worry about it.) |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:04pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
reeq: Either way is fine. You can either get a new passport now, or wait and let us tell you you need one when you come to your interview. |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:06pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
Oluseyialao: Unfortunately my response is neither quick nor very useful. There's no way to tell based on what you've written here what your chances are. We'd need to know a lot more about your relationship in order to make that determination. Good luck! |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:08pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
petismine: Greetings! Have you heard from us yet? If not, please e-mail us at LagosIV@state.gov and ask us to schedule your DNA collection appointment. Thanks! |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:10pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
islet: I have a confession to make. When I'm on holiday, I miss you too. I was really frustrated last week when I couldn't log on. Glad to be back!!! |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:10pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
BG89: You can ask for your case to be transferred to the post where you reside. I'd say send an e-mail to the good folks in Australia and ask them what their procedures are. 1 Like |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:15pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
desiJatt: When USCIS approves a petition, they're saying "We believe you have all the documents you need to adjudicate this case." Then they send it to us, and we evaluate the documents and interview the beneficiary to see if the beneficiary actually qualifies and is eligible for the visa. So, yes, we can decline to issue a visa after the petition is approved. When that happens, we send the petition back to USCIS with an explanation of our findings. USCIS (usually) gives the petitioner a chance to respond, and then they either revoke the underlying petition or send it back to us for further processing. We're faster than USCIS because we deal with fewer cases per day, and all our cases are from Nigeria. Well, sometimes we see people from other countries who happen to be residing in Nigeria, but you know what I mean. Meanwhile, USCIS is dealing with tens of thousands of cases from all around the world. Their lives are more complex than mine is, so I'm a little faster. Usually. |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:16pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
olasberguk: This is a question for my non-immigrant visa colleagues at https://www.nairaland.com/1792662/u.s-non-immigrant-visas-listening . (Also, it's not that important unless it's a pattern of BAD travel.) |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:17pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
Gbemmy121: This is a question for my non-immigrant visa colleagues at https://www.nairaland.com/1792662/u.s-non-immigrant-visas-listening . |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:17pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
iykedare: This happens all the time, so I wouldn't worry about it. It may lead the officer to ask some additional questions, but it won't be a disqualification. Good luck! |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:18pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
JehovahFavor: I didn't give you a prompt response! Have you traveled to the U.S.? How was it? I'm guessing you'll be asked to complete your vaccinations when you get to the U.S. |
Re: U.S. Immigration Questions: Ask A U.S. Consular Officer by VisaOfficer: 12:22pm On Oct 21, 2014 |
Euma: I missed you too. I'm so glad to be in Nigeria with such wonderful people! We actually don't look at the cases until the day of the interview. That's because we have so many cases that there's no point in looking until we know the applicant has actually shown up for the interview. (All too often, people don't appear for their interviews, for a variety of reasons.) There are some exceptions -- for instance, if there are several cases that are connected to each other in some way, or if the families have contacted us and we KNOW it's going to be a complicated case. But, usually, we take them as they come. Most cases turn out to be very straightforward, actually. 1 Like |
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