1st: (question)
Embassies have 2 weeks to process applications under Directive 2004/38.
They are bound by the directive to justify for taking longer.
Question: What justification did they give you at that time for taking 5 months before refusing?
2nd: (question)
Although it may not appear relevant, and although they should not be doing this, the embassies take into consideration the following for all applications:
- Nationality
- Full immigration history
- Immigration history with France
- Legal immigration status when you got married
- The duration of the relationship (inc., before and after the marriage)
If your husband had any issues at any time with any country (especially an EU state, and especially with France), this would have affected their decision.
Question: Is your husband from a "hot" country? Did your husband have any immigration / visa issues with any EU country? These include visa refusals, illegal stay, illegal entry, illegal residing during marriage, applying for a visa shortly after marriage, etc.
3rd: (solution #1 -> Visa as Father of EU child)
Since you are an EU citizen, you child must have an EU nationality.
I can think of a very very rare case where this would not be possible.
Directive 2004/38 also covers children as family members and they can not say "MoC" for a child.
Solution steps:
1st -> Your husband should go to his mystery land.
2nd -> You move to any EU country including Poland with your EU citizen child (since you exercised your right of free movement)
3rd -> Your husband applies under the directive to be with the child (nothing to do with marriage, past refusal irrelevant)
4th: (solution #2 -> Visa as Spouse)
Since it's been over a year from the initial rejection you can and should apply for a visa before attempting to cross the border where given the facts chances are you will not be let in (no positive outcome from your struggle with Solvit + courts)
Solution steps:
1st -> Contact an EU embassy in Russia and request an appointment. Tell them you have an engagement in Russia and you won't be back in country of origin but you must visit the EU country and give justification. They will give you an appointment
2nd -> Prepare all the documents the time you met (photos, addresses, utility or council bills under the same name, school etc. if attended together, copies of travel tickets, photos, travel for marriage, marriage photos, travel back etc.)
3rd -> Write a letter summarising your relationship with references to the evidence from above
4th -> Apply for a visa both as the spouse and father of the child (EU citizen)
My advice would be to do this step not in Russia but in the mystery country of origin.
5th: (soliton #3 -> UK route, reverse Surinder Singh)
You can move back to the UK under the Directive 2004/38. Once you are in the UK with a visa issued under Directive 2004/38, you can very easily travel to a Schengen country after a short stay.
Solution steps:
1st -> Husband goes to the mystery land
2nd -> You relocate to the UK and get a job and an address (any job, any address)
3rd -> You collect all the above documents and prepare the letter
4th -> Husband applies to join you and the EU child
Sour cream wrote: ↑Sat Jun 09, 2018 9:49 pm
Ok, i will reduce your unknowns here, applied in french embassy one and half year ago after 5 months of waiting got a refusal saying just MoC, during those 5 months contacted Solvit n got an answer after months that embassy considers our application MoC bcz trip for marraige to non eu spouce ‘s country was very short(actual reason for reducing the trip duration was sickness of child). Appealed in the commission of appeals after hiring an expensive lawyer got a negative decision and further proceeding to tribunal court, the court denied appeal request which took almost 6 months. So here we are. I have everything in documentation of all these unfair refusals. Coming to the point what will you think as member of border guard after these knowns ?