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Permanent Residence - EU citizens and their family members may apply, respectively, for a Permanent Residence Certificate or Permanent Residence Card after they have resided for a continuous period of 5 years in Ireland.
http://www.inis.gov.ie/en/INIS/Pages/EU ... y%20RightsThe new status of permanent residence for EU citizens and their family members after five years uninterrupted legal residence in the State is lost only in the event of more than two successive years’ absence from Ireland or in circumstances where removal procedures have been commenced against the person concerned.
AlsoWhat stamp will I get in my passportω
As well as your Registration Certificate you will also receive a stamp in your passport which specifies the duration and the conditions of your permission to remain in Ireland. The following table gives a list of the different types of stamp issued to non-EEA nationals:
Stamp number : Issued to
1 :Persons who have received an employment permit or business permission (pdf)
2 :Students who are attending a recognised full-time course of at least one year. They are permitted to work for 20 hours a week during term time and full time during holidays
2A :Students who are attending a course of less than one year. They are not permitted to work
3 :Persons who are not permitted to work. This includes visitors, tourists, retired people and spouses and dependants of employment permit holders.
4 :Spouses and dependants of Irish and EEA nationals, Convention and Programme refugees and people granted leave to remain. They are permitted to work without an employment permit or business permission.
Stamp4 (EU FAM) :Spouses and dependants of EU nationals who have exercised their right to move to and live in Ireland. They are permitted to work without an employment permit or business permission.
So,under which law you`get 2 year stamp then?If they dont accept that you are legally resident here under EU law then you may have problems getting permanent residence here in 5 years time as you will not be able to produce evidence that you were legally resident here under EU Treaty Rights..
microlab wrote:Oh... OK.
So,under which law you`get 2 year stamp then?If they dont accept that you are legally resident here under EU law then you may have problems getting permanent residence here in 5 years time as you will not be able to produce evidence that you were legally resident here under EU Treaty Rights..
People that got it are obviously given because they are dependant of the EU citizen!
That is very unlikely.I think what he was trying to say was that with the two year stamp4 permit they might decide not to renew it...
Code: Select all
So how did one get it?Which law applies there then?
Yes, it does.Thanks for letting us know.Lex wrote:It would seem to make sense that the Department would not want to give people a stamp on their passport which recognises that it was granted under EU law.
If they did this then it could be used against them in other court cases potentially especially as they are sticking to their story about the non EU spouse having to reside legally in another member state before are entitled to reside in Ireland with their EU spouse.
I hope this explains things a little better.
My wife too had received the 'famous' letter back in September. After a long struggle (I am living in Naas, Co. Kildare, so when I went to Dublin GNIB, I was asked to apply from Naas), I finally managed to get her GNIB card, and a Stamp 3 for 1 year today (somehow I feel relieved, that my wife is no longer 'illegal' here). My question is shall I now get a lawyer and insist for a Stamp 4 or wait until the EU1 decision is made? What would be the general advice?archigabe wrote:Yes, it does.Thanks for letting us know.Lex wrote:It would seem to make sense that the Department would not want to give people a stamp on their passport which recognises that it was granted under EU law.
If they did this then it could be used against them in other court cases potentially especially as they are sticking to their story about the non EU spouse having to reside legally in another member state before are entitled to reside in Ireland with their EU spouse.
I hope this explains things a little better.