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Yep, I know. I think my original post was a bit confusing.noajthan wrote:You cannot pretend you were in UK when you were not.
I want to be really safe and make sure that no evidence I give them will make them go "Hang on, he wasn't supposed to do that* whilst absent, therefore we must refuse him".As specified in my original application, I WAS absent between X and Y and here is evidence that proves beyond reasonable doubt that that was the case.
Yes, because continuity of residence applies in 12 month periods - but the pivot point is unclearly defined.secret.simon wrote:Does the concept of splitting a long holiday across qualifying years even exist in the EEA route?
As is pretty much all of EU law.noajthan wrote:the pivot point is unclearly defined
My understanding is the pivot point is based on the anniversary of applicant's entry into concerned country, eg UK.secret.simon wrote:As is pretty much all of EU law.noajthan wrote:the pivot point is unclearly defined
My point is the ambiguity of the phraseology of the law could be interpreted such that the break should not exceed six months in one go. That is to say that if I insert a pivot point at any part of the qualifying period, no more than six months of the year should have been spent outside the UK of that pivot period. So, if I chose the pivot period as the start of the OP's long break, he will have clearly failed to have acquired PR.
This incidentally has been remarked as being one problem regarding transposing EU law into UK law with the Great Repeal Bill. UK law is written in much more specific language (compare the detail in the UK Immigration Rules to the ambiguity of the EEA Regulations) and once transposed, the language of the EU law may have to be rewritten to the UK's more detailed style. That in itself will keep lawyers busy for years, never mind transposing any new EU laws that we may wish to transpose on the fly.
Indeed. Appropriate reason/intent may mean that the absence is treated under the one-year unavoidable absence clause rather than the six-months-in-a-year clause.noajthan wrote:And certain case law suggests the intent behind absence is critical and may be more important than a hard and fast 6 months drop-dead cut-off point.