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they will not give you PR again , as you are British citizen and NOT considered european anymore !serginho wrote: ↑Mon Feb 26, 2018 8:26 pmHi Unluckyeea2
Sure i can add more details, whatever information can help people in similar situations is always good.
I did get the PR before being naturalised. I only found out about this insanity that naturalisation causes you to lose rights, when i was reading about Lounes case last year.
The reason why i will now apply for PR again, even though i currently hold both a PR and a British citizenship, is because thats the only way my spouse can apply for a family residence card using the European passport return service without having to surrender her passport.
If she applies for a family residence card alone, she cannot use the European passport return service so she will have to surrender her original passport and can't travel for 6 months until they decide. Thats why i have to apply too and add her in the application (and pay £130 for 2 people instead of the normal £65 for one applicant).
Before going through the UK law rule, i did contact the immigration helpline and they made it absolutely clear to me that a holder of UK nationality can never be consider a EEA national, nomatter the circumastances.
I told them, look guys, my case is not the same as McCarthy, i came here from a different EEA country and have been exercising treaty rights, working and contrbuting by paying my taxes and all, so why are you now removing my freedom of movement rights, just because i got the UK nationality? They told me that once i naturalised, they don't count me as EEA anymore, and if i my spouse applies for family permit she would be rejected. I called the helpline many times and all of the advisors said the same thing.
Anyways, since i was short of time, my spouse applied under the UK rules. I couldn't waste time with her applying for family permit and wait until getting rejected before applying for spouse visa.
Now since her spouse visa is only valid for 2.5 years, it has to be renewed again in the future, paying another £2-3k and then apply for ILR which would cost another £2k, before being able to apply for british nationality which will cost another £2k...
So thats why i am looking for her to get the EEA family residence card, cause even after Brexit, i believe she will have the right to stay without having to apply for th costly UK spouse visa.
@reynaldogr: thanks for the support! enjoy travelling while you can. Besides all this mess we are all in now, it is ridiculous we are expected to live without a passport for 6 months without asking any questions...Unluckyeea2 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 26, 2018 2:21 pmHello everyone , thanks for updates . Yes , Succsses82 is not covered by TA and he clearly mentioned his sponsors BC and date of naturalisation in application form . I read somewhere online news that HO was aware of Lounes hearing and monitoring closely .
@ Salu did you submitted application through lawyer ?If so and delayed decision they will follow up .Thanks to all for sharing stories . Keep update please .
Probably you're right. But then how is my spouse going to apply for the EEA residence permit? If she applies directly using the EEA(FM) EEA2 form then she has to surrender her only passport for 6 months or more which is not something that we can do.chaoscontrol wrote: ↑Mon Feb 26, 2018 10:35 pm
they will not give you PR again , as you are British citizen and NOT considered european anymore !
Ok , got it : you thought: if you’re a family member of a European national then you don`t need to pay that IHS surcharge when applying ...chaoscontrol wrote: ↑Wed Feb 28, 2018 12:53 amI don`t know what you are talking about : what the IHS surcharge ? And why you think that if they returning that IHS surcharge back to you then that`s mean HO is implementing CJEU ruling `Lounes C-165/16` ?
could anybody explain please what`s all that about ?
Thank you .
Yeah so bascially, im a dual EEA/UK national and my spouse applied for spouse visa in order to join me in the UK, last year before the Lounes decision. As part of that application she had to pay IHS surcharge.chaoscontrol wrote: ↑Wed Feb 28, 2018 1:06 am
Ok , got it : you thought: if you’re a family member of a European national then you don`t need to pay that IHS surcharge when applying ...
so , to check if they implementing Lounes you simply applied for money back in case they will consider you a family member of eu national and not british (dual) ?
well.. may they return this money to him because of different reason ?
so, this may mean they gone by EU route now , hence asking for proof of your wife been exercising treaty rights . That`s good .Ron121 wrote: ↑Fri Mar 02, 2018 1:02 amUpdate. Hello all . Today my Solicetor received a letter from HO to withdrawal of the appeal and we’ll reconsidered my application. And ask him to sen my wife exercising treaty right for the 5 year continues period to claiming for permanent residence.and the give us 10 working days to send all evidence.
Many thanks for sharing the progress of your appeal Ron121.
Hi Ron121,
But he is been legally in UK in May 2012(on student visa) .