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Visit http://www.ind.nlscrudu wrote: I am an Irish citizen, and after being constantly frustrated by the Immigration system in Ireland, am considering leaving to look for work in another EU state. My husband is a non-EEA citizen (Indonesian), and we were considering moving to Holland.
Has anyone been through the process of applying (EU 1) for their EU treaty rights in Holland? How difficult is the process and how long did it take to process?
scrudu wrote:I guess we havent thought that far ahead. At the moment we just want to find a place where we can live in the same country and work.
There is also no entitlement to citizenship in Ireland should we decide to stay here. The Minister and his department reserve the right to refuse any application at their complete discretion.
"Going the domestic route" means applying for a spouse visa under normal UK rules rather than an EEA Family Permit. Irish citizens can sponsor under normal UK rules rather than the EEA route if they wish.scrudu wrote:Dawie: That is indeed something we are considering.
JAJ: What do you mean by "going the domestic route"?
So if we were to head to the UK, the first thing we would have to apply for is a "Spouse Visa". Is this different from a EEA family permit? I was reading on http://www.ukvisas.gov.uk/servlet/Front ... 8721068382 which says that my spouse should fill out a "VAF1 - non-settlement" application.
Most EEA nationals in the UK can be granted permanent resident status after 5 years. This carries with it a few things, including the right to sponsor under standard UK rules, eligibility for naturalisation and British citizenship for UK-born children.scrudu wrote: JaJ: Thanks for clearing that up. I didnt realise that the UK offered for IRL citizens could sponsor under regular UK rules. That's good news at least! I'll read up more on that to figure out our options.
You might need to be resident in the United Kingdom before you're in a position to sponsor.scrudu wrote: I'll get in contact with the British Embassy here and find out if we can apply for here, but I imagine both processes take a number of months to process, during which time he would have to leave Ireland. So we may end up with my husband applying from Indonesia, while I stay here for work.
EEA Family permits are now issued with 6 months validity. Under the immigration rules those with leave to enter (or presumably admitted under EU Treaty laws) of 6 months or less validity other than that where such is a fiance visa may not switch to a spouse visa on the basis of a relationship with a person present and settled in the UK. It would seem they would have to wait to near the 6 month mark then apply for an extension on EU Treaty rules get a 5 year permit then apply to switch to spouse further lengthening the timeline to ILR.JAJ wrote:A further option you should look at is (especially if he could apply in Dublin) an EEA Family Permit initially, to get him into the UK, and then switching to a normal spouse visa on an in-country basis.
Kayalami wrote: EEA Family permits are now issued with 6 months validity. Under the immigration rules those with leave to enter (or presumably admitted under EU Treaty laws) of 6 months or less validity other than that where such is a fiance visa may not switch to a spouse visa on the basis of a relationship with a person present and settled in the UK. It would seem they would have to wait to near the 6 month mark then apply for an extension on EU Treaty rules get a 5 year permit then apply to switch to spouse further lengthening the timeline to ILR.