Simon
Well-Known Member
...and the Nairobi Embassy is privy to this...Speaking of constitutions;in my country one can marry one wife on civil laws and a second wife on customary laws.Its acceptably lawfull.But this is not considered polygamy.
...and the Nairobi Embassy is privy to this...Speaking of constitutions;in my country one can marry one wife on civil laws and a second wife on customary laws.Its acceptably lawfull.But this is not considered polygamy.
Speaking of constitutions;in my country one can marry one wife on civil laws and a second wife on customary laws.Its acceptably lawfull.But this is not considered polygamy.
The US immigration system is (in my opinion) quite "accepting" of various forms of marriage. They do recognize some traditional marriages IF those marriages are recognized by the laws of the country where the marriage took place. Marriage is different all over the world - and the US accepts that, within reason.
For Reez, his case has disqualification written all over it. If he believed he was married to wife B, why did he get a legal divorce from wife A. He can't have been married to both of them because Kenya doesn't recognize Polygamous marriages and US immigration would have something to say about that too. He has correctly listed all the truthful details on his DS260, but I cannot see how he can get to the point where he was legally married to wife B at the point of the eDV entry.
I appreciate admins responses;but issuing blanket responses on issues marriage to me is failing to recognise the global complexity of the institution called marriage.ThanksThe issue you should be concerned with IMO is the marriage date listed on your eDV application. My guess is you listed your current spouse on your eDV application, and it doesn't sound like you were legally divorced from your ex by then, you however finalized the divorce and recently obtained the divorce papers which enabled you to get a recent marriage certificate, correct? How do you plan on expanding that?
Are you confusing the terms polygamy and bigamy?
No it shouldn't lead to a disqualification in your case.
I appreciate admins responses;but issuing blanket responses on issues marriage to me is failing to recognise the global complexity of the institution called marriage.Thanks
I think the marriage law changes as recently as last year are also confusing the issue.
sureI appreciate admins responses;but issuing blanket responses on issues marriage to me is failing to recognise the global complexity of the institution called marriage.Thanks
I guess only one marriage certificate is issued to any polygamous marriage as per our constitution-stand to be corrected and obviously depends with who (wife No1 or No2 ) secures the certificate first.The whole thing is so confusing almost likened to the GAY MARRIAGE-The Nairobi America Embassy would recognize Gay marriage and hence two gentlemen who walks in to the Embassy will be required to produce a marriage certificate-Now the KENYA Government won't issue any what will happen to this?Will the Embassy force the Government to issue one or the Embassy will corrupt its own system siting some clauses of Unfair and discrimination treatment.You are right@Britsimon. Largely, the changes were meant to legally recognize traditional marriages and guide them to enable women lay claim to property ownership even in polygamous setup. Clearly they were obviously disadvantaged in the older arrangement.
I guess where our laws conflict with the DV requirements the DV legal requirements reign supreme and we have to somehow shape up or ship out.
Speaking of constitutions;in my country one can marry one wife on civil laws and a second wife on customary laws.Its acceptably lawfull.But this is not considered polygamy.
Did I state that!!! Am thoughtful of what I say and always avoid being cheap...
I appreciate admins responses;but issuing blanket responses on issues marriage to me is failing to recognise the global complexity of the institution called marriage.Thanks
Can you show us which section of the Kenyan constitution says being married to two women, one under civil and the other under customary laws, does not constitute polygamy?
One thing you need to realize is that most of the times when we ask further questions following the initial questions posted by members and subsequently respond, what we're trying to do is get people to better prepare for their interviews and to understand the fact that the meanings ascribed to whatever the situation they're dealing with is beyond the definition they may initially ascribe to it. Yes your country may have its unique definition of what constitutes a marriage, but you need to understand the CO isn't from your country and may not necessarily understand that. The kind of questions and guidance we provide is geared towards helping people better respond at the time of interview.
p.s. Some of us here equally are originally from Africa, so don't assume we have no idea of how things apply or work in Africa.
...after giving my personal opinion of the use of affidavits "instead of quitting the entire process due to what you call marriage discrepancies" you instead rubbished my idea as ridiculous and i quote"Indeed. So ridiculous! EDIT:I think affidavit is the new PEPTO BISMOL"Did you state "no need to reply"? - Yes you did
Did you state "don't spoil for a fight" - Yes you did
Did you state "the U.S. embassy in Nairobi is an exemption to immigration laws"? - Yes you did
Did you state an affidavit "is a magic wand"? - Yes you did, and I went ahead to give two examples of how absurd it is to make such a claim that an affidavit can fix every discrepancy in an immigration application simply because the embassy has a list of authorized lawyers who can draft the affidavit on their website.
So what has "being cheap" got to do with the conversation?
... and you know what:most of our input is done out of our own understanding of both the Government of Kenya and its diverse traditions-and NOT AFRICA AS a whole.For your information we have 42 tribes in Kenya which have diverse ways when dealing with marriages,just Google some of court rulings on marriages in Kenya and you will understand some ruling were or are based on tradition( a case in mind is for the late Wambui Otieno verses Her late Criminal lawyer and the Luo community)One thing you need to realize is that most of the times when we ask further questions following the initial questions posted by members and subsequently respond, what we're trying to do is get people to better prepare for their interviews and to understand the fact that the meanings ascribed to whatever the situation they're dealing with is beyond the definition they may initially ascribe to it. Yes your country may have its unique definition of what constitutes a marriage, but you need to understand the CO isn't from your country and may not necessarily understand that. The kind of questions and guidance we provide is geared towards helping people better respond at the time of interview.
p.s. Some of us here equally are originally from Africa, so don't assume we have no idea of how things apply or work in Africa.
... and you know what:most of our input is done out of our own understanding of both the Government of Kenya and its diverse traditions-and NOT AFRICA AS a whole.For your information we have 42 tribes in Kenya which have diverse ways when dealing with marriages,just Google some of court rulings on marriages in Kenya and you will understand some ruling were or are based on tradition( a case in mind is for the late Wambui Otieno verses Her late Criminal lawyer and the Luo community)