On their website they say that a visa is needed:
by now we have a funny exchange of emails:>>Lithuanian Embassy London*<< wrote:...NOTE: holders of resident permits/cards, issued by the United Kingdom, have to apply for Schengen visa for travel to Lithuania. Resident permit with a note “Resident Card of a Family Member of an EEA National”, issued by the United Kingdom, does not correspond to the Directive 2004/38/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on the right of citizens of the Union and their family members to move and reside freely within the territory of the Member States, and therefore is not accepted as a document allowing to travel to Lithuania visa free.
my first mail wrote:Dear Madam or Sir,
I (Belgian Citizen) would like to travel with my wife (Lebanese citizen, we are both resident in the UK) to Poland for two weeks, and take a short excursion to Kaunas.
I learned that I have to apply for a Schengen-Visa with the country where we enter first / stay longest, which would be Poland.
The >>Polish Consulate in London*<< informed me, that we do not have to apply for a Schengen-visa, as my wife holds a UK-issued “Resident Card of a Family Member of an EEA National”. They told us to just go and enjoy...
However, checking your website I learn that the opposite is supposedly true, that a “Resident Card of a Family Member of an EEA National” is not valid and that we have to apply for a visa.
Can you tell me what is true / what shall we do?
Thanks and regards,
There was lots of back and forth about Schengen, not acknowledging that this is about 2004/38/EC, which has nothing to do with Schengen as such.their first reply wrote:Dear Mr ...,
Referring to your enquiry I‘d like to inform you that both websites display correct information meaning that travelling together with your spouse you can enter Poland without visa being required to her, however for entrance to Lithuania visa is necessary (makes lots of sense ). Although there are border control (I guess they meant "are no border control") at the Lithuanian-Polish border, I’d advice your wife to apply for a visa at this Embassy.
Sincerely yours,
my ~5th email to them wrote:Dear ...,
the regulations that I am referring to have nothing to do with Schengen.
The law that allows entry to my wife and me, without a visa, is 2004/38/EC (English version >>here*<<, Lithuanian version can be found >>here*<<).
I would much appreciate if you could verify the laws I cite above in great detail, and subsequently change the information given on your website.
- I am a Belgian citizen, as such I may enter Lithuania without a visa (2004/38/EC, Article 5 Section 1 "...No entry visa or equivalent formality may be imposed on Union citizens."). I do hope we agree on this?
- My wife possesses a UK-issued residence card according to 2004/38/EC, Article 10.
- This card allows her entry into all EEA countries (this includes Lithuania), according to Article 5, Section 2:
Right of entry
(...)For the purposes of this Directive, possession of
the valid residence card referred to in Article 10 shall exempt
such family members from the visa requirement.- Please note this has nothing to do with Schengen!
- Were my wife not in possession of above card, she would still be allowed to enter Lithuania without visa according to Article 5, Section 4 of 2004/38/EC:
Where a Union citizen, or a family member who is not a national of a Member State, does not have the necessary travel documents or, if required, the necessary visas, the Member State concerned shall, before turning them back, give such persons every reasonable opportunity to obtain the necessary documents or have them brought to them within a reasonable period of time or to corroborate or prove by other means that they are covered by the right of free movement and residence.- The Embassy of Poland confirms what I say, as you can see on their website >>here*<<:
- If you are a family member of the EU national, please note that, on the basis of Directive 2004/38/EC you do not need an entry visa...
- The Embassy of Germany confirms the same in a letter they hand to affected persons >>here*<<.
Until then I will report this matter to the European Commission, and my wife and me will continue to avoid Lithuania as a tourist destination (just as you unfortunately ask us to).
Thanks and regards,
their ~5th reply wrote:Dear Mr ...,
Referring to your letter I would like to inform you that internal borders of EU may be crossed at any point without a border check on persons, irrespective of their nationality, being carried out. Since Lithuania has joined EU, there are no border checks at the internal borders with our EU neighboring countries (Poland, Latvia). Also, I would like to inform you, that visa is not necessary for residence of countries which issue the cards corresponding with provisions of the directive 2004/38/EB. The UK presently issues cards that do not correspond with the above mentioned directive. Therefore holders of this document still need visa. As soon as UK will start to issue documents corresponding with provisions of directive 2004/38/EB, the owners of such document will be not required visa. This is not Lithuanian, this is – EU legislation. Sorry for the inconveniences.
Best regards,
Last email sent today, Tuesday March 06th 2012. Will update the thread should I get more replies...my ~6th email to them wrote:Dear Ms ...,
what you write is nearly correct, may I add some observations:Referring to your letter I would like to inform you that internal borders of EU may be crossed at any point without a border check on persons, irrespective of their nationality, being carried out. Since Lithuania has joined EU, there are no border checks at the internal borders with our EU neighboring countries (Poland, Latvia).
- Lithuania joined the European Union on May 01st 2004, which had no immediate influence on the borderchecks to neighboring countries. There are no border checks between Lithuania and Poland/Latvia since all mentioned countries joined Schengen (not the EU, as you say) on December 21st 2007.
Also, I would like to inform you, that visa is not necessary for residence of countries which issue the cards corresponding with provisions of the directive 2004/38/EB (we agree on this). The UK presently issues cards that do not correspond with the above mentioned directive.
- The UK chooses to illegally disregard the exact letters of Article 10, which states that the residence card should be named "Residence card of a family member of a Union citizen". The UK-equivalent is called "Residence Card of a Family Member of an EEA National". As such it would only require little imagination as to what is meant. However, your following conclusion:
Therefore holders of this document still need visa. As soon as UK will start to issue documents corresponding with provisions of directive 2004/38/EB, the owners of such document will be not required visa.
- is incorrect. If you (Lithuania) would use your imagination and agree that "Residence card of a family member of a Union citizen" and "Residence Card of a Family Member of an EEA National" both mean a residence card according to Article 10 (which it effectively is), we would agree immediately that the concerned citizens may travel. However, even if you do not agree because of the difference of the last three words, concerned people may still legally travel to Lithuania without visa according to Article 5, Section 4 of 2004/38/EC:
Where a Union citizen, or a family member who is not a national of a Member State, does not have the necessary travel documents or, if required, the necessary visas, the Member State concerned shall, before turning them back, give such persons every reasonable opportunity to obtain the necessary documents or have them brought to them within a reasonable period of time or to corroborate or prove by other means that they are covered by the right of free movement and residence.This is not Lithuanian, this is – EU legislation. Sorry for the inconveniences.
- Exactly because it is EU legislation, you (Lithuania) should look around and see what other countries do. I cannot comprehend why specifically Poland (but also Germany, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Austria and Italy) allow us entry with the mentioned UK-issued card, while you keep insisting entry is not allowed.
Other way of seeing it: If we may enter Poland and Latvia with the mentioned card, and there are no border checks between Poland/Latvia and Lithuania, what is the point of telling us that it´s not allowed to enter Lithuania? If we wanted to reach Lithuania for illegal purposes (that is what visas should avoid?) it wouldn´t be a problem (enter Poland/Latvia and then drive). However, law-abiding as we are, we don´t go and hence don´t spend money in Lithuania.
- See Info on >>Polish Consulate´s website*<<.
- See >>letter issued by German Embassy in London*<<.
- considering Germany sais that entry into the EU (which includes Lithuania) is allowed, you should contact them and tell them to write "but not Lithuania" or something equivalent?! As it looks now, the German Embassy directly contradicts you!
I will repeat what I said before: Until you (Lithuania) will adopt the correct interpretation of the law, my wife and me will continue to avoid Lithuania as a tourist destination. Lithuania´s advantage to this will remain your secret.
I remain at your disposal should you have questions/feedback about the subject,
Thanks and Regards,
* All links valid as quoted on Tuesday, March 06th 2012.