What are these stamps in my passport after I was advised to divert via the UK but didn't have a visa?











up vote
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I am from Myanmar. I was on my way to Venice from Brussels while holding Schengen visa (single entry). I bought a British Airways ticket to fly from Brussels to Venice. Unfortunately, on that day, all BA flights from Brussels were canceled. British Airway's customer service centre told me to go to from Brussels to London by train, where I could catch my flight to Venice. I took a taxi to Bruxelles-Midi train station and bought a ticket to London. A Brussels immigration officer inspected and approved my passport.



Then I had to to through UK Border Immigration. There, they said I can't enter to get my flight. Although I explained the situation with the airline and made clear of my destination (I already reserved my hotels in Venice, Switzerland and France as described in my travel itinerary), they detained me for some hours and also took my fingerprints on paper and photo.



They asked questions concerned about my finances and gave me a refusal letter for not having a transit visa. So I had to re-enter Brussels where the immigration officer put the below stamp in my passport. As I had a single entry Schengen visa, I had to buy another airline ticket to Venice and complete my Europe trip.




  1. What do the stamps below mean on my passport?

  2. Can they affect me and, if so, how and why, when I apply for another Schengen visa?


Exit stamp from Brussels by train, crossed out"Immigration officer, Brussels", crossed out










share|improve this question









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  • 25




    Did you inform BA in Brussels that you did not have a visa to transit the UK? It’s not clear to me why they would expect you to re-route via London rather than another airport within the Schengen Area, or why you would think that you could do so.
    – Traveller
    2 days ago








  • 70




    @Traveller I think the answer to "why you would think that you could do so" is that you would expect that an airline wouldn't send their passengers on an impossible journey. I don't think it's unreasonable for a passenger to assume that travel professionals know what they are doing. BA made a mistake in not checking that OP had the documents required, and I wouldn't place blame on the passenger here.
    – MJeffryes
    2 days ago








  • 11




    Looks like things began to go wrong when you had a single-entry Schengen visa and nevertheless bought a ticket from Brussels to Venice via London. That itinerary would not work no matter whether you went to London by air or by train.
    – Henning Makholm
    2 days ago






  • 53




    @HenningMakholm These things may seem obvious to you, but why should the average traveler know that the UK is not in Schengen, particularly if they never intended to go there?
    – MJeffryes
    2 days ago






  • 23




    Guys. the question was just about the meaning of the stamps and phoog already answered that. It is not really relevant how the original itinerary was, if someone has made a mistake and if so, who made a mistake.
    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    2 days ago















up vote
56
down vote

favorite
4












I am from Myanmar. I was on my way to Venice from Brussels while holding Schengen visa (single entry). I bought a British Airways ticket to fly from Brussels to Venice. Unfortunately, on that day, all BA flights from Brussels were canceled. British Airway's customer service centre told me to go to from Brussels to London by train, where I could catch my flight to Venice. I took a taxi to Bruxelles-Midi train station and bought a ticket to London. A Brussels immigration officer inspected and approved my passport.



Then I had to to through UK Border Immigration. There, they said I can't enter to get my flight. Although I explained the situation with the airline and made clear of my destination (I already reserved my hotels in Venice, Switzerland and France as described in my travel itinerary), they detained me for some hours and also took my fingerprints on paper and photo.



They asked questions concerned about my finances and gave me a refusal letter for not having a transit visa. So I had to re-enter Brussels where the immigration officer put the below stamp in my passport. As I had a single entry Schengen visa, I had to buy another airline ticket to Venice and complete my Europe trip.




  1. What do the stamps below mean on my passport?

  2. Can they affect me and, if so, how and why, when I apply for another Schengen visa?


Exit stamp from Brussels by train, crossed out"Immigration officer, Brussels", crossed out










share|improve this question









New contributor




Ei Ei San is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 25




    Did you inform BA in Brussels that you did not have a visa to transit the UK? It’s not clear to me why they would expect you to re-route via London rather than another airport within the Schengen Area, or why you would think that you could do so.
    – Traveller
    2 days ago








  • 70




    @Traveller I think the answer to "why you would think that you could do so" is that you would expect that an airline wouldn't send their passengers on an impossible journey. I don't think it's unreasonable for a passenger to assume that travel professionals know what they are doing. BA made a mistake in not checking that OP had the documents required, and I wouldn't place blame on the passenger here.
    – MJeffryes
    2 days ago








  • 11




    Looks like things began to go wrong when you had a single-entry Schengen visa and nevertheless bought a ticket from Brussels to Venice via London. That itinerary would not work no matter whether you went to London by air or by train.
    – Henning Makholm
    2 days ago






  • 53




    @HenningMakholm These things may seem obvious to you, but why should the average traveler know that the UK is not in Schengen, particularly if they never intended to go there?
    – MJeffryes
    2 days ago






  • 23




    Guys. the question was just about the meaning of the stamps and phoog already answered that. It is not really relevant how the original itinerary was, if someone has made a mistake and if so, who made a mistake.
    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    2 days ago













up vote
56
down vote

favorite
4









up vote
56
down vote

favorite
4






4





I am from Myanmar. I was on my way to Venice from Brussels while holding Schengen visa (single entry). I bought a British Airways ticket to fly from Brussels to Venice. Unfortunately, on that day, all BA flights from Brussels were canceled. British Airway's customer service centre told me to go to from Brussels to London by train, where I could catch my flight to Venice. I took a taxi to Bruxelles-Midi train station and bought a ticket to London. A Brussels immigration officer inspected and approved my passport.



Then I had to to through UK Border Immigration. There, they said I can't enter to get my flight. Although I explained the situation with the airline and made clear of my destination (I already reserved my hotels in Venice, Switzerland and France as described in my travel itinerary), they detained me for some hours and also took my fingerprints on paper and photo.



They asked questions concerned about my finances and gave me a refusal letter for not having a transit visa. So I had to re-enter Brussels where the immigration officer put the below stamp in my passport. As I had a single entry Schengen visa, I had to buy another airline ticket to Venice and complete my Europe trip.




  1. What do the stamps below mean on my passport?

  2. Can they affect me and, if so, how and why, when I apply for another Schengen visa?


Exit stamp from Brussels by train, crossed out"Immigration officer, Brussels", crossed out










share|improve this question









New contributor




Ei Ei San is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I am from Myanmar. I was on my way to Venice from Brussels while holding Schengen visa (single entry). I bought a British Airways ticket to fly from Brussels to Venice. Unfortunately, on that day, all BA flights from Brussels were canceled. British Airway's customer service centre told me to go to from Brussels to London by train, where I could catch my flight to Venice. I took a taxi to Bruxelles-Midi train station and bought a ticket to London. A Brussels immigration officer inspected and approved my passport.



Then I had to to through UK Border Immigration. There, they said I can't enter to get my flight. Although I explained the situation with the airline and made clear of my destination (I already reserved my hotels in Venice, Switzerland and France as described in my travel itinerary), they detained me for some hours and also took my fingerprints on paper and photo.



They asked questions concerned about my finances and gave me a refusal letter for not having a transit visa. So I had to re-enter Brussels where the immigration officer put the below stamp in my passport. As I had a single entry Schengen visa, I had to buy another airline ticket to Venice and complete my Europe trip.




  1. What do the stamps below mean on my passport?

  2. Can they affect me and, if so, how and why, when I apply for another Schengen visa?


Exit stamp from Brussels by train, crossed out"Immigration officer, Brussels", crossed out







uk schengen-visa denial-of-entry myanmar-citizens






share|improve this question









New contributor




Ei Ei San is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









David Richerby

10.5k74074




10.5k74074






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Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 2 days ago









Ei Ei San

28325




28325




New contributor




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New contributor





Ei Ei San is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Ei Ei San is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 25




    Did you inform BA in Brussels that you did not have a visa to transit the UK? It’s not clear to me why they would expect you to re-route via London rather than another airport within the Schengen Area, or why you would think that you could do so.
    – Traveller
    2 days ago








  • 70




    @Traveller I think the answer to "why you would think that you could do so" is that you would expect that an airline wouldn't send their passengers on an impossible journey. I don't think it's unreasonable for a passenger to assume that travel professionals know what they are doing. BA made a mistake in not checking that OP had the documents required, and I wouldn't place blame on the passenger here.
    – MJeffryes
    2 days ago








  • 11




    Looks like things began to go wrong when you had a single-entry Schengen visa and nevertheless bought a ticket from Brussels to Venice via London. That itinerary would not work no matter whether you went to London by air or by train.
    – Henning Makholm
    2 days ago






  • 53




    @HenningMakholm These things may seem obvious to you, but why should the average traveler know that the UK is not in Schengen, particularly if they never intended to go there?
    – MJeffryes
    2 days ago






  • 23




    Guys. the question was just about the meaning of the stamps and phoog already answered that. It is not really relevant how the original itinerary was, if someone has made a mistake and if so, who made a mistake.
    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    2 days ago














  • 25




    Did you inform BA in Brussels that you did not have a visa to transit the UK? It’s not clear to me why they would expect you to re-route via London rather than another airport within the Schengen Area, or why you would think that you could do so.
    – Traveller
    2 days ago








  • 70




    @Traveller I think the answer to "why you would think that you could do so" is that you would expect that an airline wouldn't send their passengers on an impossible journey. I don't think it's unreasonable for a passenger to assume that travel professionals know what they are doing. BA made a mistake in not checking that OP had the documents required, and I wouldn't place blame on the passenger here.
    – MJeffryes
    2 days ago








  • 11




    Looks like things began to go wrong when you had a single-entry Schengen visa and nevertheless bought a ticket from Brussels to Venice via London. That itinerary would not work no matter whether you went to London by air or by train.
    – Henning Makholm
    2 days ago






  • 53




    @HenningMakholm These things may seem obvious to you, but why should the average traveler know that the UK is not in Schengen, particularly if they never intended to go there?
    – MJeffryes
    2 days ago






  • 23




    Guys. the question was just about the meaning of the stamps and phoog already answered that. It is not really relevant how the original itinerary was, if someone has made a mistake and if so, who made a mistake.
    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    2 days ago








25




25




Did you inform BA in Brussels that you did not have a visa to transit the UK? It’s not clear to me why they would expect you to re-route via London rather than another airport within the Schengen Area, or why you would think that you could do so.
– Traveller
2 days ago






Did you inform BA in Brussels that you did not have a visa to transit the UK? It’s not clear to me why they would expect you to re-route via London rather than another airport within the Schengen Area, or why you would think that you could do so.
– Traveller
2 days ago






70




70




@Traveller I think the answer to "why you would think that you could do so" is that you would expect that an airline wouldn't send their passengers on an impossible journey. I don't think it's unreasonable for a passenger to assume that travel professionals know what they are doing. BA made a mistake in not checking that OP had the documents required, and I wouldn't place blame on the passenger here.
– MJeffryes
2 days ago






@Traveller I think the answer to "why you would think that you could do so" is that you would expect that an airline wouldn't send their passengers on an impossible journey. I don't think it's unreasonable for a passenger to assume that travel professionals know what they are doing. BA made a mistake in not checking that OP had the documents required, and I wouldn't place blame on the passenger here.
– MJeffryes
2 days ago






11




11




Looks like things began to go wrong when you had a single-entry Schengen visa and nevertheless bought a ticket from Brussels to Venice via London. That itinerary would not work no matter whether you went to London by air or by train.
– Henning Makholm
2 days ago




Looks like things began to go wrong when you had a single-entry Schengen visa and nevertheless bought a ticket from Brussels to Venice via London. That itinerary would not work no matter whether you went to London by air or by train.
– Henning Makholm
2 days ago




53




53




@HenningMakholm These things may seem obvious to you, but why should the average traveler know that the UK is not in Schengen, particularly if they never intended to go there?
– MJeffryes
2 days ago




@HenningMakholm These things may seem obvious to you, but why should the average traveler know that the UK is not in Schengen, particularly if they never intended to go there?
– MJeffryes
2 days ago




23




23




Guys. the question was just about the meaning of the stamps and phoog already answered that. It is not really relevant how the original itinerary was, if someone has made a mistake and if so, who made a mistake.
– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
2 days ago




Guys. the question was just about the meaning of the stamps and phoog already answered that. It is not really relevant how the original itinerary was, if someone has made a mistake and if so, who made a mistake.
– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
2 days ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
100
down vote



accepted










The first stamp means that your exit from the Schengen area was cancelled. This is a good thing, since if you had been allowed to exit the Schengen area, you would not have been able to fly from the UK to Italy.



The second stamp means that you were refused entry into the UK. You will have to report this if you're ever asked whether you were refused entry. If you explain the circumstances, the refusal is not likely to have much of a negative impact. The key points are:




  • you were in the Schengen area with a single-entry visa

  • your flight from Belgium to Italy was cancelled

  • the airline instructed you to travel by way of the UK

  • neither the airline nor you realized that you lacked the necessary visas for that itinerary

  • the UK immigration officer therefore refused entry into the UK






share|improve this answer

















  • 29




    +1 excellent answer. However, I think you should emphasize that OP really must declare the refused entry on future visa applications (for all countries). This will probably not be a big deal -- just some further questioning. However, the consequences of failing to declare this would be quite bad.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 14




    @Thomas Visa applications for many countries do not ask about previous issues with immigration in other countries. There is absolutely no need to declare this situation if not asked about it.
    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    2 days ago






  • 3




    @Tor-EinarJarnbjo that may be true but most do. I just wanted to emphasize that this must be declared even to countries like the US that were not part of the described incident.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 5




    @phoog They likely don't ask on ESTA for Visa Waiver Program, but it might come up as an interview question for someone applying for a standard visa.
    – gparyani
    2 days ago






  • 10




    @Thomas You would think that they could omit one of the many variations of the "are you a terrorist" question in favor of a more useful question about your background instead, but the DS-160 seems to be more designed to ensure you've checked "no" to lots of boxes about bad things than eliciting background information.
    – Zach Lipton
    2 days ago











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
100
down vote



accepted










The first stamp means that your exit from the Schengen area was cancelled. This is a good thing, since if you had been allowed to exit the Schengen area, you would not have been able to fly from the UK to Italy.



The second stamp means that you were refused entry into the UK. You will have to report this if you're ever asked whether you were refused entry. If you explain the circumstances, the refusal is not likely to have much of a negative impact. The key points are:




  • you were in the Schengen area with a single-entry visa

  • your flight from Belgium to Italy was cancelled

  • the airline instructed you to travel by way of the UK

  • neither the airline nor you realized that you lacked the necessary visas for that itinerary

  • the UK immigration officer therefore refused entry into the UK






share|improve this answer

















  • 29




    +1 excellent answer. However, I think you should emphasize that OP really must declare the refused entry on future visa applications (for all countries). This will probably not be a big deal -- just some further questioning. However, the consequences of failing to declare this would be quite bad.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 14




    @Thomas Visa applications for many countries do not ask about previous issues with immigration in other countries. There is absolutely no need to declare this situation if not asked about it.
    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    2 days ago






  • 3




    @Tor-EinarJarnbjo that may be true but most do. I just wanted to emphasize that this must be declared even to countries like the US that were not part of the described incident.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 5




    @phoog They likely don't ask on ESTA for Visa Waiver Program, but it might come up as an interview question for someone applying for a standard visa.
    – gparyani
    2 days ago






  • 10




    @Thomas You would think that they could omit one of the many variations of the "are you a terrorist" question in favor of a more useful question about your background instead, but the DS-160 seems to be more designed to ensure you've checked "no" to lots of boxes about bad things than eliciting background information.
    – Zach Lipton
    2 days ago















up vote
100
down vote



accepted










The first stamp means that your exit from the Schengen area was cancelled. This is a good thing, since if you had been allowed to exit the Schengen area, you would not have been able to fly from the UK to Italy.



The second stamp means that you were refused entry into the UK. You will have to report this if you're ever asked whether you were refused entry. If you explain the circumstances, the refusal is not likely to have much of a negative impact. The key points are:




  • you were in the Schengen area with a single-entry visa

  • your flight from Belgium to Italy was cancelled

  • the airline instructed you to travel by way of the UK

  • neither the airline nor you realized that you lacked the necessary visas for that itinerary

  • the UK immigration officer therefore refused entry into the UK






share|improve this answer

















  • 29




    +1 excellent answer. However, I think you should emphasize that OP really must declare the refused entry on future visa applications (for all countries). This will probably not be a big deal -- just some further questioning. However, the consequences of failing to declare this would be quite bad.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 14




    @Thomas Visa applications for many countries do not ask about previous issues with immigration in other countries. There is absolutely no need to declare this situation if not asked about it.
    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    2 days ago






  • 3




    @Tor-EinarJarnbjo that may be true but most do. I just wanted to emphasize that this must be declared even to countries like the US that were not part of the described incident.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 5




    @phoog They likely don't ask on ESTA for Visa Waiver Program, but it might come up as an interview question for someone applying for a standard visa.
    – gparyani
    2 days ago






  • 10




    @Thomas You would think that they could omit one of the many variations of the "are you a terrorist" question in favor of a more useful question about your background instead, but the DS-160 seems to be more designed to ensure you've checked "no" to lots of boxes about bad things than eliciting background information.
    – Zach Lipton
    2 days ago













up vote
100
down vote



accepted







up vote
100
down vote



accepted






The first stamp means that your exit from the Schengen area was cancelled. This is a good thing, since if you had been allowed to exit the Schengen area, you would not have been able to fly from the UK to Italy.



The second stamp means that you were refused entry into the UK. You will have to report this if you're ever asked whether you were refused entry. If you explain the circumstances, the refusal is not likely to have much of a negative impact. The key points are:




  • you were in the Schengen area with a single-entry visa

  • your flight from Belgium to Italy was cancelled

  • the airline instructed you to travel by way of the UK

  • neither the airline nor you realized that you lacked the necessary visas for that itinerary

  • the UK immigration officer therefore refused entry into the UK






share|improve this answer












The first stamp means that your exit from the Schengen area was cancelled. This is a good thing, since if you had been allowed to exit the Schengen area, you would not have been able to fly from the UK to Italy.



The second stamp means that you were refused entry into the UK. You will have to report this if you're ever asked whether you were refused entry. If you explain the circumstances, the refusal is not likely to have much of a negative impact. The key points are:




  • you were in the Schengen area with a single-entry visa

  • your flight from Belgium to Italy was cancelled

  • the airline instructed you to travel by way of the UK

  • neither the airline nor you realized that you lacked the necessary visas for that itinerary

  • the UK immigration officer therefore refused entry into the UK







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 days ago









phoog

66.1k10146210




66.1k10146210








  • 29




    +1 excellent answer. However, I think you should emphasize that OP really must declare the refused entry on future visa applications (for all countries). This will probably not be a big deal -- just some further questioning. However, the consequences of failing to declare this would be quite bad.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 14




    @Thomas Visa applications for many countries do not ask about previous issues with immigration in other countries. There is absolutely no need to declare this situation if not asked about it.
    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    2 days ago






  • 3




    @Tor-EinarJarnbjo that may be true but most do. I just wanted to emphasize that this must be declared even to countries like the US that were not part of the described incident.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 5




    @phoog They likely don't ask on ESTA for Visa Waiver Program, but it might come up as an interview question for someone applying for a standard visa.
    – gparyani
    2 days ago






  • 10




    @Thomas You would think that they could omit one of the many variations of the "are you a terrorist" question in favor of a more useful question about your background instead, but the DS-160 seems to be more designed to ensure you've checked "no" to lots of boxes about bad things than eliciting background information.
    – Zach Lipton
    2 days ago














  • 29




    +1 excellent answer. However, I think you should emphasize that OP really must declare the refused entry on future visa applications (for all countries). This will probably not be a big deal -- just some further questioning. However, the consequences of failing to declare this would be quite bad.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 14




    @Thomas Visa applications for many countries do not ask about previous issues with immigration in other countries. There is absolutely no need to declare this situation if not asked about it.
    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    2 days ago






  • 3




    @Tor-EinarJarnbjo that may be true but most do. I just wanted to emphasize that this must be declared even to countries like the US that were not part of the described incident.
    – Thomas
    2 days ago






  • 5




    @phoog They likely don't ask on ESTA for Visa Waiver Program, but it might come up as an interview question for someone applying for a standard visa.
    – gparyani
    2 days ago






  • 10




    @Thomas You would think that they could omit one of the many variations of the "are you a terrorist" question in favor of a more useful question about your background instead, but the DS-160 seems to be more designed to ensure you've checked "no" to lots of boxes about bad things than eliciting background information.
    – Zach Lipton
    2 days ago








29




29




+1 excellent answer. However, I think you should emphasize that OP really must declare the refused entry on future visa applications (for all countries). This will probably not be a big deal -- just some further questioning. However, the consequences of failing to declare this would be quite bad.
– Thomas
2 days ago




+1 excellent answer. However, I think you should emphasize that OP really must declare the refused entry on future visa applications (for all countries). This will probably not be a big deal -- just some further questioning. However, the consequences of failing to declare this would be quite bad.
– Thomas
2 days ago




14




14




@Thomas Visa applications for many countries do not ask about previous issues with immigration in other countries. There is absolutely no need to declare this situation if not asked about it.
– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
2 days ago




@Thomas Visa applications for many countries do not ask about previous issues with immigration in other countries. There is absolutely no need to declare this situation if not asked about it.
– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
2 days ago




3




3




@Tor-EinarJarnbjo that may be true but most do. I just wanted to emphasize that this must be declared even to countries like the US that were not part of the described incident.
– Thomas
2 days ago




@Tor-EinarJarnbjo that may be true but most do. I just wanted to emphasize that this must be declared even to countries like the US that were not part of the described incident.
– Thomas
2 days ago




5




5




@phoog They likely don't ask on ESTA for Visa Waiver Program, but it might come up as an interview question for someone applying for a standard visa.
– gparyani
2 days ago




@phoog They likely don't ask on ESTA for Visa Waiver Program, but it might come up as an interview question for someone applying for a standard visa.
– gparyani
2 days ago




10




10




@Thomas You would think that they could omit one of the many variations of the "are you a terrorist" question in favor of a more useful question about your background instead, but the DS-160 seems to be more designed to ensure you've checked "no" to lots of boxes about bad things than eliciting background information.
– Zach Lipton
2 days ago




@Thomas You would think that they could omit one of the many variations of the "are you a terrorist" question in favor of a more useful question about your background instead, but the DS-160 seems to be more designed to ensure you've checked "no" to lots of boxes about bad things than eliciting background information.
– Zach Lipton
2 days ago










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