Mu-Chun Chiang: NHS doctor, 27, threatened with deportation despite living in UK for 13 years told she can stay

Mu-Chun Chiang, 27, has lived in the UK for 13 years. She had been told her visa application was rejected and told to leave.
PA

The Home Office has abandoned its plan to deport an NHS doctor who has lived in the UK for the majority of her life.

Mu-Chun Chiang’s visa application had been rejected and she was told to leave the UK or risk six months' imprisonment.

The 27-year-old’s case was described as "a nonsensical administrative issue" and attracted the attention of campaigners.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock has since said that after taking up Dr Chiang's case with the Home Office it had been resolved.

"Deeply upsetting saga for Mu and her loved ones,” he wrote in a tweet on Wednesday.

“I've taken Mu's case up directly with the Home Office & I'm delighted to report Mu's visa issue has been resolved.”

Dr Chiang, originally from Taiwan, has lived in the UK for more than 13 years.

Dr Chiang lived in Glasgow from 1997 to 2002 with her parents before returning to the UK in 2006 to study.

She has lived there since, now working at Aintree University Hospital in Liverpool.

After Dr Chiang's student visa expired in June, her application for a new working visa was rejected in August.

It was rejected due to a Home Office rule stating an applicant's bank balance cannot drop below £945 in the 90 days beforehand.

Dr Chiang said she had more than that amount saved and the bank account she used for the application had the correct money by the end of each month, but had dropped below for a few days in one of them.

She appealed against the failure by sending details of a separate savings account to show she always had the money required, but this was declined as it was not provided with the initial application.

Dr Chiang then received a letter on Friday from the Home Office telling her the application was unsuccessful, and that she "must leave the UK now" or she would "be liable to be detained and removed".

The letter said she could be prosecuted, adding that she could work or access benefits while in the UK, and despite being on call she had been unable to work at her hospital in Liverpool since.

Her lead employer also called her on Tuesday to tell her that because the letter is dated to September 19 there is a possibility she will not get paid for the shifts she has done since then.

After receiving the letter, Dr Chiang's friend and fellow doctor Mina Mesri set up a petition calling for her to be allowed to stay in the UK, which has received over 25,000 signatures in a matter of days.

Following the Home Office's decision, Dr Mesri posted an update on Change.org and crediting the petition and media attention it generated for the outcome.

A Home Office spokesman told PA: "Following reconsideration of this case in light of additional evidence supplied by Ms Chiang, we have now contacted her to confirm her leave to remain.

"Ms Chiang is not and was not subject to removal proceedings."

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