Entering the UK without a family permit
Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2012 4:49 pm
Hey everyone,
I'm currently in the UK on a 6-month tourist visa as a non-EEA national and I'm in a relationship with a EEA national (Polish) who is employed here and so is exercising treaty rights. We're both planning to have a civil partnership in the next two weeks before travelling to Spain on holiday. Since I'm already in the UK, it isn't possible to apply for a 6-month family permit and so I'm interested in what our options for re-entry are.
When we re-enter the UK after our holiday, we will already have entered into our civil partnership.
I wonder, would it be wiser to enter the UK in the visa line using my tourist visa or to accompany him in the EU line at the airport?
By the latter, could I assert my right to be landed on the basis of Article 5(4) of the EEA Directive which requires the border agent to land the family member of an EEA national who, though lacking a family permit or residence card, is able to provide that he is the family member of the EEA national? I imagine that our civil partnership certificate, our passports and the evidence of my partner exercising treaty rights (pay slips, for example) would be the relevant proof.
Has anyone here ever done this before?
If I am landed under this, will I also have the right to work? We intend on applying for the EEA2 residence card shortly after returning from Spain, but will this "border entry documentation" be sufficient as an interim measure to allow me to remain legally with my partner and also work during the period for which my application is being processed for the eventual residence card?
What happens if I choose to re-enter using my temporary tourist visa instead? Would that be a misrepresentation and could I be in trouble?
Thanks a lot for any answers you can give.
Cheers!
I'm currently in the UK on a 6-month tourist visa as a non-EEA national and I'm in a relationship with a EEA national (Polish) who is employed here and so is exercising treaty rights. We're both planning to have a civil partnership in the next two weeks before travelling to Spain on holiday. Since I'm already in the UK, it isn't possible to apply for a 6-month family permit and so I'm interested in what our options for re-entry are.
When we re-enter the UK after our holiday, we will already have entered into our civil partnership.
I wonder, would it be wiser to enter the UK in the visa line using my tourist visa or to accompany him in the EU line at the airport?
By the latter, could I assert my right to be landed on the basis of Article 5(4) of the EEA Directive which requires the border agent to land the family member of an EEA national who, though lacking a family permit or residence card, is able to provide that he is the family member of the EEA national? I imagine that our civil partnership certificate, our passports and the evidence of my partner exercising treaty rights (pay slips, for example) would be the relevant proof.
Has anyone here ever done this before?
If I am landed under this, will I also have the right to work? We intend on applying for the EEA2 residence card shortly after returning from Spain, but will this "border entry documentation" be sufficient as an interim measure to allow me to remain legally with my partner and also work during the period for which my application is being processed for the eventual residence card?
What happens if I choose to re-enter using my temporary tourist visa instead? Would that be a misrepresentation and could I be in trouble?
Thanks a lot for any answers you can give.
Cheers!