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I applied for U S visa for my wife in the year 2005, and was rejected .on the reason 214 B.
As my daughter is In USA as and softwer engineer and earning good salary ,and she asponsored her visit .
now again i want to apply for US visa .for my self along with the wife .
what prepration should i done , to avoid the rejection

2007-02-05 22:56:46 · 4 answers · asked by Anil J 2 in Travel United States Other - United States

4 answers

Applicants are refused under Section 214(b) INA if they are unable to demonstrate to the satisfaction of a consular officer that they have sufficiently strong and long-term family, social, and economic ties outside the United States which make them depart the United States after a temporary stay.

Consular officers tend to focus on factors that help us determine whether the applicants possess compelling ties to applicant’s home country:

If the applicants have traveled to the U.S. previously, how long did they stay? If they stayed longer than 6 months, did they have INS approval to do so? (Note: Please have the applicants bring their INS extension approval notices to their interview).
If the applicants have traveled to the U.S. previously, how long have they been back in home country?
How many children and grandchildren do the applicants have back in home country?
Have the relatives in the U.S. ever returned to home country to visit their families as is normal for foreign students, workers, and residents in the U.S.?
Are the applicant active professionally in their home country; if so, what is their income and the nature of their work?
The answers to these questions relate to whether applicants can fulfill the statutory requirement of the Immigration and Nationality Act to show that they have a permanent residence in their home country.
Each case is different in its own and consular officer evaluates each visa application on its own merits according to visa law and procedures.

2007-02-05 23:12:10 · answer #1 · answered by MaNN 2 · 2 0

tHIS IS POSTED FROM THE OFFICIAL WEB SITE OF THE US. HOPE FOR THE BEST .

How to Apply for a Non-immigrant US Visa at the US Embassy or US Consulate in India
Applying online


Step 1: All nonimmigrant visa applicants except "Officials travelling on government business" and "Officials of international organisation travelling for official purpose" must pay the Application Fee and VFS Service Charge at a designated branch of HDFC bank before applying for a visa. Click here for more information.
Step 2: Return to this site and click on the Apply for a Non-immigrant Visa link once the fees are paid. You will need to use the barcode number from your HDFC Bank Fee Receipt in order to schedule an appointment.
Step 3: Report to the US Embassy or Consulate where your appointment for a visa interview is scheduled. You will need to bring the printed Appointment Letter, the Visa Application Forms, one recent photograph, the original HDFC Bank Fee Receipt with its two barcode stickers. Applications without an original HDFC Bank Receipt or with an incorrect photograph will NOT be accepted.
Procedure to schedule an online interview at the Mumbai Consulate

Counter Service
Applicants can seek information at any US Visa Application Centre located in 11 cities across India. Applicants scheduled at the Mumbai Consulate (only) must submit their visa application packs across-the-counter at the US Visa Application centres located in West India after scheduling their online interview appointment.

Important: We recommend that you check the appointment availability before making travel arrangements or paying the visa application and service fees. Click here for an estimate of current availability of visa interview appointments.

2007-02-06 02:21:24 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

nicely, you could in simple terms say which you have been denied under section 214(b). this means that each and each alien (different than a nonimmigrant defined in subparagraph (l)or(v) of section one 0 one(a)(15), and different than a nonimmigrant defined in any provision of section one 0 one(a)(15)(H)(i) different than subclause (b1) of such section) would be presumed to be an immigrant until eventually he establishes to the delight of the consular officer, on the time of utility for a visa, and the immigration officers, on the time of utility for admission, that he's entitled to a nonimmigrant prestige. in short you probably did no longer coach adequate ties on your abode u . s . a .. in basic terms nicely worth repeating if now you do.

2016-12-17 10:31:51 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You may send an email with details to Mr. Sudhir Shah: sudhir.shah@airtelbroadband.in . He is number one consultant in this subject.

2007-02-05 23:09:11 · answer #4 · answered by P.D. 2 · 0 0

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