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(3) An immigration officer must not place a stamp in the passport of a person admitted to the United Kingdom under this regulation who is not an EEA national if the person produces a residence card, a derivative residence card, a permanent residence card or a qualifying EEA State residence card.
I agree. I think it would be outrageous if for instance unmarried partners had to prove 2 years of co-habitation before they will be allowed in with an Article 10 RC. It would totally be against the concept of free movement. The RC is in effect a visa and the UK should simply be letting people in with proof of ID and the RC without other nonsense checks if they were being compliant with EU law, just like other Schengen states do.357mag wrote:It will be interesting to see if anyone gets hassle or turned away if they come through without a marriage certificate, for instance if they got their residence certificate as a durable relationship or as the child of a partner in a durable relationship.
You will have had your relationship checked before being issued the residence certificate so I think another state asking you to prove it is not in the spirit of free movement.
rosebead wrote:^ A right of entry with a Article 10 residence card is different to a right of residence, so if the UK expects people to satisfy Chapter III of the Directive (right of residence) before they will allow them to enter, that would be grossly out of keeping with Community law. The Directive does not exclude certain family member holders of Article 10 RCs from using the RC to travel. It says that all Article 10 RCs give a visa exemption.
I think you misunderstood McCarthy then. What the UK sought to do, was require EEA family permit pre-entry, and justify that by using the Frontier Protocol.rosebead wrote:But how is that "free movement" in that case? I thought the whole point of the McCarthy ruling was that the UK could not use the Frontier Protocol to obstruct family member holders of Article 10 RCs from travelling?
Are we saying the UK now require you re-verify your eligibility at the port, so you already have a "document issued by the competent authority of the State of origin or the State whence they came, proving relationship" but you must re-prove relationship again at the port1. The requirement for an immigration visa
26. That national of a non-Member State should not be required to show any
independent reason for entering into the territory. His right, as a matter of
Community law, is derived from the right enjoyed by the Community national, so
that to require that person to fulfill formal conditions prior to entry into
national territory constitutes not only a restriction on his (derived) right but
also a restriction on the principal right of the Community national.
31. It is therefore apparent from the provisions of the directives on the
entry of members of the family, as interpreted by the Court, that entry
formalities must be restricted to the expressly specified documents and that any
further immigration procedure is not permissible.
"a document issued by the competent authority of the State of origin
or the State whence they came, proving their relationship"
That is what the court said about the Frontier protocol.
61 Those controls are carried out ‘at frontiers’ and are intended to verify whether persons seeking to enter the United Kingdom have a right of entry under provisions of EU law or, in the absence of such a right, whether they should be granted permission to enter the United Kingdom. The controls therefore have the objective in particular of preventing the United Kingdom’s borders with other Member States from being crossed unlawfully.
62 Thus, in the case of family members of a Union citizen who are not nationals of a Member State and who seek to enter the United Kingdom in reliance upon a right of entry provided for by Directive 2004/38, verification, for the purposes of Article 1 of Protocol No 20, consists, in particular, in checking whether the person concerned is in possession of the documents prescribed in Article 5 of that directive. In this regard, even though the Court has held that residence permits issued on the basis of EU law, by nature, declare and do not create rights (judgments in Dias, EU:C498, paragraph 49, and O. and B., EU:C135, paragraph 60), the fact remains that, as has been established in paragraph 53 of the present judgment, the Member States are, in principle, required to recognise a residence card issued under Article 10 of Directive 2004/38, for the purposes of entry into their territory without a visa.
63 In accordance with its objective of preventing borders from being crossed unlawfully, verification, for the purposes of Article 1 of Protocol No 20, may include examination of the authenticity of those documents and of the correctness of the data appearing on them as well as examination of concrete evidence that justifies the conclusion that there is an abuse of rights or fraud.
64 It follows that Article 1 of Protocol No 20 authorises the United Kingdom to verify whether a person seeking to enter its territory in fact fulfils the conditions for entry, including those provided for by EU law. On the other hand, it does not permit the United Kingdom to determine the conditions for entry of persons who have a right of entry under EU law and, in particular, to impose upon them extra conditions for entry or conditions other than those provided for by EU law.
65 This is precisely the case here. By requiring an EEA family permit to be obtained in advance, the national legislation at issue in the main proceedings prescribes, for family members of a Union citizen who are not nationals of a Member State and who are in possession of a valid residence card issued under Article 10 of Directive 2004/38, a condition for entry which is additional to the conditions for entry provided for in Article 5 of the directive, and not simply verification of those conditions ‘at frontiers’.
(8) With a view to facilitating the free movement of family members who are not nationals of a Member State, those who have already obtained a residence card should be exempted from the requirement to obtain an entry visa ...
clnsen wrote:
We want to travel to/trough london ( with stopover ). Do we need a VISA for my wife ?
We want to travel from Frankfurt to London with British Airways.