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That is a good question. If in doubt, I would apply for a visa to France.guido wrote:We want to go to The Netherlands now, but we want to travel via France (by train) to The Netherlands, however I cannot find anything on the French embassy website if they also have adapted this Directive.
France is yet to implement the Directive in this respect. Therefore your wife would have to apply to the French embassy for a Schengen visa (transit if only passing through) as the spouse of a EU national. The visa is issued free of charge.Does anyone have any experience with this if this is possible
Apply for a transit visa from French Embassy. If you read properly under this section, you will notice that it says if you are passing through France by train, car, whatever; you can apply for a transit visa. Unlike the Netherlands Embassy, they issue Schengen visas even if you have a UK Residence Card. So maybe better to go for that one. Good Luck!guido wrote:I am a Dutch national and I hold a Dutch passport my wife is Turkish and she holds a Turkish passport with a UK EEA(2) 'Residence Card of a Family Member of an EEA National' and we currently live in the UK.
I have contacted the Dutch embassy and they have explained to me that since July 2008 under Directive 2004/38/EC you can now travel to The Netherlands directly if you hold a 'Residence Card of a Family Member of an EEA National' without a Schengen Visa (as long as the EEA National you are dependent on travels with you)
We want to go to The Netherlands now, but we want to travel via France (by train) to The Netherlands, however I cannot find anything on the French embassy website if they also have adapted this Directive.
Does anyone have any experience with this if this is possible ?
Ref: http://www.netherlands-embassy.org.uk/p ... .php?i=261
Source: http://ambafrance-uk.org/Visa-for-family-of-an-EuropeanThe foreign spouse of a EU national (except French national) may enter France without visa if holding:
...
- A valid travel document;
A valid UK residence permit with the endorsement "family member of EEA national" (this endorsement is compulsory to be visa exempted);
and if they are joining or travelling with the EU national.
Things have moved on since you first posted all that time back. All EU countries, except the UK now recognise article 10 residence cards.guido wrote:Thank you for all the replies.
Further to my original post above, I note that France has now implemented this directive (Directive 2004/38/EC). It now clearly states on their Consulate General's website;
Hmm.. I guess that is out of the window then. I might just give the Dutch Embassy a call tomorrow morning to see what they have to say.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Careful, this only applies to family permits issued under the previous (2000) regulations.guido wrote: Although the document lacks the same statement as it does on the Dutch Embassy's website that the same rules apply for a EEA Family Permit.
Thank you, I will have a look.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Things have moved on since you first posted all that time back. All EU countries, except the UK now recognise article 10 residence cards.guido wrote:Thank you for all the replies.
Further to my original post above, I note that France has now implemented this directive (Directive 2004/38/EC). It now clearly states on their Consulate General's website;
This thread may interest you.
http://www.immigrationboards.com/viewtopic.php?t=98029
Thank you for your suggestion. I have considered to go down the EEA4 route as well for my wife especially seeing that it is free, but we will probably apply for a British Passport (she has been living here in the UK since 2006). As it will probably have more benefits in the long run.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:This post is unrelated to your question and current problem.
You might want to apply for a Permanent Residence Card for your partner. That is free. I would include a cover letter that indicates you wish the application to be evaluated for the period from [start date] to [end date], where those are the earliest possible 5 year period of residence.
Then it is a very straight forward application for citizenship. (That is not free).
I think of it as a no cost document checking service.
I doubt that your wife has a family permit issued under the 2000 regs and so it is unlikely to be of relevance.guido wrote:Hmm.. I guess that is out of the window then. I might just give the Dutch Embassy a call tomorrow morning to see what they have to say.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Careful, this only applies to family permits issued under the previous (2000) regulations.guido wrote: Although the document lacks the same statement as it does on the Dutch Embassy's website that the same rules apply for a EEA Family Permit.
Yes, unfortunately that seems to be the case.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:I doubt that your wife has a family permit issued under the 2000 regs and so it is unlikely to be of relevance.guido wrote:Hmm.. I guess that is out of the window then. I might just give the Dutch Embassy a call tomorrow morning to see what they have to say.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Careful, this only applies to family permits issued under the previous (2000) regulations.guido wrote: Although the document lacks the same statement as it does on the Dutch Embassy's website that the same rules apply for a EEA Family Permit.
In your initial post, you stated that your wife has a residence card.