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atahboub wrote:hello,
i would like to know what are the permission and possibilities to get my
mother who is non eu, to live with me in Ireland. iam irish by naturalization,
is there any scheme or something she could use, in which she could claim
irish citizenship , or if its even possible?
thanks a lot
/ayman
If you are starting business that means she would need to get a work permit to work for you which right now are literally shut! it also requires documentation to prove for e.g. if you are opening up IT business you need to show IT skills/qualification etc of the candidate to convince department of trade to issue work visa and why there is no one here in Ireland available to do this job for you plus the category of job should not be listed as banned category under work permit guidelines. You just cant simply say to department of trade that this person is my family member and he/she will work for me, unfortunately it wont work this way.atahboub wrote:hiya Fatty,
thanks a lot for the prompt response, really very much appreciated, and yes i agree with you regarding "need permission to go the toilet "..
sound, then i presume the other way she could, is by let say getting her into some work, there are plans of starting a possible business in Ireland, but to your knowledge are their any age requirements or restrictions?
let say a family type business was to start,,, i suppose that could work?
/ayman
This would be based on both of you living and working in Northern Ireland for the 5 years.Nehro wrote:your mum may qualify for a British (not Irish) passport. This route is based on you are being an EU citizen (Irish) exercising your treaty rights in the UK (NI)
HibernoPars wrote:I’m in a similar situation. Here you are with my case.
I'm a naturalised Irish citizen. My parents are non-EEA nationals currently visiting me in Ireland. Their 90-day permission on this visit expires in mid November.
I would like to apply for their residence here in Ireland, in other words for them to stay legally with me here. My parents are in their sixties and pensioners in their home country.
I couldn't find any transparent doc in relation to the process. The closest thing I found was EU treaty rights, in which the forms recognise / include parents as 'Family Members'.
Well, considering Irish nationality as an EU nationality subset, I wrote to the EU Treaty Rights section of Department of Justice. In response they said as I'm an Irish citizen I should contact General Immigration Section.
I wrote to the above section and enclosed copy of my Irish passport, my parents’ passports and their Irish visa and the entry stamp for their current visit. In response I received an acknowledgement of receipt of the correspondence. I may add that there is no reference number issues, although the letter template has a place for reference numbers. Moreover this brief letter says that they deal with applications in chronological order.
Now I'd like to know:
1- Is there any hope for my parents to be given a new stamp and possibly GNIB card while they are still here ie in the next 40 days?
2- Can they over-stay their current visa on the basis of the above acknowledgement of receipt of the correspondence?
3- If they can’t over stay and/or if there is no compelling case here, so what are the options if any?
4- If there is no well defined transparent process and/or options, do you recommend engaging a solicitor for the case?
I appreciate your expert input here.
Many thanks.
HP
This High Court case was settled by the DOJ in Nov 2008 butfatty patty wrote:
Thursday, October 29, 2009
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ire ... 04571.html
Above case was settled outside of court by DoJ...as if it would have gone through and had DoJ lost it would have been forceable by courts and DoJ had to give non-eu parents of Irish citizens permission to stay.
No wayacme4242 wrote:This High Court case was settled by the DOJ in Nov 2008 butfatty patty wrote:
Thursday, October 29, 2009
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ire ... 04571.html
Above case was settled outside of court by DoJ...as if it would have gone through and had DoJ lost it would have been forceable by courts and DoJ had to give non-eu parents of Irish citizens permission to stay.
the DOJ double crossed the family one year later.
Around 17 Nov 2008 the DOJ had settled the High Court case outside the doors of the High Court.
http://www.rte.ie/news/2008/1117/immigration.html
http://www.immigrantcouncil.ie/press_detail.php?id=83
Around 24 Nov 2009 DOJ double crossed the family,
and even succeeded in blocking the family from getting
near the high court second time around.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ire ... 38935.html
Last I knew, the Irish family Mother was facing deportation.
I don't know what happened after this.
fatty patty wrote:If you are starting business that means she would need to get a work permit to work for you which right now are literally shut! it also requires documentation to prove for e.g. if you are opening up IT business you need to show IT skills/qualification etc of the candidate to convince department of trade to issue work visa and why there is no one here in Ireland available to do this job for you plus the category of job should not be listed as banned category under work permit guidelines. You just cant simply say to department of trade that this person is my family member and he/she will work for me, unfortunately it wont work this way.atahboub wrote:hiya Fatty,
thanks a lot for the prompt response, really very much appreciated, and yes i agree with you regarding "need permission to go the toilet "..
sound, then i presume the other way she could, is by let say getting her into some work, there are plans of starting a possible business in Ireland, but to your knowledge are their any age requirements or restrictions?
let say a family type business was to start,,, i suppose that could work?
/ayman
work permit (any salary but certain jobs)
http://www.deti.ie/publications/labour/ ... ay2010.pdf
green card permit (30k+ p/a salary certain jobs) (over 60k p/a salary any job)
http://www.deti.ie/publications/labour/ ... ug2010.pdf