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Status of family in Switzerland

Posted: Sat Jul 23, 2016 5:25 pm
by WalSag
noajthan wrote:
mart1711 wrote:No, your wife is not your sponsor; under UK law (in the context of immigration) she is not even recognised as an EEA national (and that is even before Brexit).

As you are a Union citizen you apply in your own right as the main applicant and you do not have a sponsor.
(Its a poorly-designed and generic form used for many different scenarios).
I second that. I had to read and reread the form and the guidance to get my head round it, and I am used to filling in rather complicated forms at work. Calling the call centre is likely to take a while, and complaining is not likely to achieve much: I can't take my business elsewhere!
One lady I know is a EU national, married to a Brit, with a child (I think the child has the British nationality only). They live in Switzerland where the child was born. She has lived in the UK before they moved, and was in work, but for less than the necessary 5 years. Wonder how they're going to sort the situation out. Ironically, they moved from the UK to Switzerland partly because she is mixed race and was fed up with the everyday beloved.

Re: Permanent Residence Certifcate question

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2016 9:50 am
by ohara
WalSag wrote:One lady I know is a EU national, married to a Brit, with a child (I think the child has the British nationality only). They live in Switzerland where the child was born.
Quite odd that the child would have only inherited a single nationality in that situation, although I believe Switzerland is one of the few countries which doesn't have any amount of jus soli in their nationality law, except to prevent statelessness. Most EU countries will allow nationality to pass down at least one generation to children born abroad (hence how the child has British citizenship).

If the worst comes to the worst and we get a bad Brexit deal, they could presumably all come back to the UK with the wife on a UK spouse visa and the father and child using their British passports.

Re: Permanent Residence Certifcate question

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2016 11:47 am
by Richard W
ohara wrote:
WalSag wrote:One lady I know is a EU national, married to a Brit, with a child (I think the child has the British nationality only). They live in Switzerland where the child was born.
Quite odd that the child would have only inherited a single nationality in that situation, although I believe Switzerland is one of the few countries which doesn't have any amount of jus soli in their nationality law, except to prevent statelessness. Most EU countries will allow nationality to pass down at least one generation to children born abroad (hence how the child has British citizenship).
Many countries have expatriation laws that take effect without any action by or on behalf of the victim. If Wikipedia be right, if the mother is Dutch, the child could have lost Dutch nationality for being British and for living outside the EU and outside the Kingdom of the Netherlands without a Dutch passport.

Re: Status of family in Switzerland

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2016 11:58 am
by noajthan
Moved out as nothing to do with original post in original topic.