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Sham marriage bride to be deported after serving jail term

An Indian woman who entered into a sham marriage with a man she didn't even speak the same language as will be deported after serving a jail sentence.

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Gurjit Kaur, 39, who used to stay in Dudley Street, Wolverhampton, tied the knot with Slovakian Vladimir Gazi at Shrewsbury registry office in order to try and gain full citizenship to the UK.

The marriage was one of six organised by crooked solicitor Zafar Abbas, who lined his own pockets by setting up the ceremonies for foreign nationals who wanted permanent residency to this country.

But staff at the registry office suspected Kaur and Gazi weren't quite love's young dream, as they showed little interaction when they got hitched.

Prosecutor Tariq Shakoor told Wolverhampton Crown Court: "This case involves a sham marriage to a Slovakian national called Vladimir Gazi. He pleaded guilty to the same offence at Birmingham Crown Court, and he was given a 16-month prison sentence. He was deported following that sentence.

"The man who organised this sham wedding and other sham weddings was found guilty at a trial at the same court. He was Zafar Abbas, and he was sentenced to six years.

"The defendant is an Indian national who arrived in this country in 2010 on a student visa, which was to run until June 2012." She avoided the authorities for two years after her visa ran out, and got married on June 10, 2014.

The prosecutor added: "She married Gazi at Shrewsbury registry office. A member of staff was suspicious because they appeared to know very little about each other. There was apparently very little interaction between them and he didn't appear to read any of the documents he was signing. A report was submitted to police.

"On April 2, the defendant submitted an application to stay in this country based on that marriage.

"When she was arrested after the trial of Zafar Abbas in October, she told police that she didn't hand herself in because she was scared of what would happen to her if she was deported. At first she maintained that it was a proper marriage, and Abbas was a family friend."

Kaur, who's address was given as Whernside, Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, admitted to one charge of conspiring to break immigration laws.

Defence solicitor Simon Hanns told the court: "She was the victim of an incredibly abusive relationship with her ex-husband in India. She fears the consequences of returning there.

"She maintained that it was a proper marriage at first, but it was obvious that it wasn't, they didn't even share a common tongue."

Judge Amjad Nawaz told Kaur: "You maintained in your interview with police that this marriage wasn't a sham. You deliberately broke immigration laws."

He sentenced her to 16 months in prison. She will be deported on her release.

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