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sum1 wrote:See the relevant sub-document in the border force operations manual.
You can submit a complaint to UKBA (provide accurate information about place and time of the incident, including the flight number) that the examination you experienced went way beyond this, to the extent of being inappropriate.Examination should be to establish that the passenger is the rightful holder of
the document and that he has not been absent from the UK for more than 2
years.
5.2 Endorsing the passports of residence card holders - Regulation 11(3)
A Border Force officer may not place a stamp in the passport of a person
who holds a residence card when he is admitted to the UK, even if they do not
hold an EEA family permit. Regulation 11(3) expressly prohibits an officer
from endorsing the passport of a person who holds a valid residence card or
permanent residence card, even if the passenger requests one. In addition
these passengers are not required to fill in a landing card and should not be
asked to do so.
many thanks fysicusfysicus wrote:In section 5.3 of the sub-document about EEA nationals it says:You can submit a complaint to UKBA (provide accurate information about place and time of the incident, including the flight number) that the examination you experienced went way beyond this, to the extent of being inappropriate.Examination should be to establish that the passenger is the rightful holder of
the document and that he has not been absent from the UK for more than 2
years.
Section 5.2 of the same document provides interesting reading as well (although off-topic for this thread), answering a question that was placed numerous times on this forum5.2 Endorsing the passports of residence card holders - Regulation 11(3)
A Border Force officer may not place a stamp in the passport of a person
who holds a residence card when he is admitted to the UK, even if they do not
hold an EEA family permit. Regulation 11(3) expressly prohibits an officer
from endorsing the passport of a person who holds a valid residence card or
permanent residence card, even if the passenger requests one. In addition
these passengers are not required to fill in a landing card and should not be
asked to do so.
mcovet wrote:i wonder why u simply did not refuse to.amswer such intrusive questions! u should have asked him what difference would any of my amswers make and what would he do if u didn't answer?
obviously, it is a good idea to print out the 5.2-5.3 and shove it in the IOs face without saying a word. should he persist, ask for a Chief IO and tell him your rights under the EU law are being infringed.
end of story! if more people stop pussying around when cimmunicating with ignorant IOs, and later even submit complaints AND carry the ukba replies with them, fewer incidents like this would occur.
mcovet wrote:to a question where ur wife was, u could have answered any of the following:
"how would I know, we separated after i got my PR"
"she is currently in my back pocket"
"i am her?!"
"how do u know my family member is a wife? it could be a civil partnership or i could be an extended family member of my eea son, brother or cousin!"
"where is yours?"
"how much do they pay you to sit in this booth?"
"on a scale 1-10, how satisfied r u with this job?"
"who trained you?"
"are you new?"
anyway, hope others on this forum do not REALLY take the above as a guide to act in this manner, only those who know what they r doing can attempt it.
i did have a haircut day before i flew back. just i don't think i answer 2 questions correctly as it was almost midnight and i was falling sleep.mcovet wrote:he checked ur fingerprints cause u prob looked dodgy to him.and.he checked if u exist in their database. They cannot include u in the database like that, randomly without a warning and a procedure filling out ur details and making u sign to consent!
What a strange turn of events. Never fill a landing card.Punjab wrote:Hey Guys! Just wish to share IO thingy
I came from budapest to the UK and I filled the landing card. I gave my documents to the IO with PR stamp page and he said am I married with an EU/EEA and I said yes. He asked atleast 10 questions what I do, what my wife does, where we met, where we got married, her job and personal question why don't we have any child. I seriosuly was getting fed up. Later he asked me to put my thumb and the adjacent finger on the scanner. I have read from previous posts that now i am independent of my EU/EEA partner to enter the UK as I have a PR stamp. But I don't understand why the IO was interested in other questions. Last but not the least he asked me where my wife is and I replied she is waiting for me in the arrivals and then again he asked 5 more questions why did i travel alone etc.
I was just wondering if there is any pdf file or anything which shows your rights to enter the UK after being granted PR?
Many thanks
yes strongly agree with you. i always think them as little curious children and let them practise what they are suppose to do in other cases. no hard feelings for them.anp wrote:Why be a prick? As soon as the officer begins asking you questions about your spouse, politely remind him/her your PR status. If he/she insists, you keep insisting too. They are genuiely not trained. Don't resort to arrogance no matter what!! Its rude and unnecessary. Btw, no need to fill a landing card no more.