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EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:The person who wrote that email requires to be educated.
I take it that you are British and have a family member who wishes to travel with you to Sweden. This is most certainly covered by the directive.
PART III: SPECIFIC RULES RELATING TO APPLICANTS WHO ARE FAMILY
MEMBERS OF EU CITIZENS OR SWISS CITIZENS
3.6. Supporting documents
In order to prove that the applicant has the right to be issued with an entry visa under the
Directive, he must establish that he is a beneficiary of the Directive. This is done by
presenting documents relevant for the purposes of the three questions referred to above, i.e.
proving that:
• there is an EU citizen from whom the visa applicant can derive any rights;
• the visa applicant is a family member (e.g. a marriage certificate, birth certificate,
proof of dependency, serious health grounds, durability of partnerships …) and his
identity (passport); and
• the visa applicant accompanies or joins an EU citizen (e.g. a proof that the EU
citizen already resides in the host Member State or a confirmation that the EU
citizen will travel to the host Member State).
It is an established principle of EU law in the area of free movement that visa applicants have
the right of choice of the documentary evidence by which they wish to prove that they are
covered by the Directive (i.e. of the family link, dependency …). Member States may,
however, ask for specific documents (e.g. a marriage certificate as the means of proving the
existence of marriage), but should not refuse other means of proof.
negomilamb wrote:Great, thanks so much for the help everyone!
update -
So I emailed the consul telling him that he had interpreted the directive wrong, and I said would email solvit, myeurope, and the ambassador, and I also called him a couple of times during consul opening hours....and got our friends to keep calling them too :p . He emailed me back last week:
'Your husband can apply for a visa, free of charge if he fulfills the conditions set out in article 3 of Directive 2004/38/EC - if your residing in or move to (which given the other paragraphs in 2004/38/EC should also be seen as visit) another member state, in this case Sweden, and he accompanies or joins you there.
What he needs to present to us is his passport, one passports photographs (to be scanned to the visa) and original marriage certificate.'
Submitted everything yesterday, Now just have to wait a couple of weeks! Thanks again
(And this was just planning to apply, we didn't want to apply until we were reasonably sure that the visa would be issued, because I've heard a visa rejection is quite bad for future applications.)