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If I understand correctly, the Certificate of Identity is something you had at a time when you did not have a passport. Now that you have a Kenyan passport, you have surrendered the Certificate of Identity. Your "leave to remain" is now stamped in the passport.dhcp wrote:Now looking on their website it states:-
Holders of a Certificate of Identity with limited leave to remain in the United Kingdom are not recognized by the BENELUX (Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg) countries.
Now I believe my certificate was kept by the Home Office when my passport got stamped. Its basically the same what is now actually stamped in my passport. Is what is stamped in my passport the same as the documenst I had?
residence permit which says limited leave to remainDirective/2004/38/EC wrote:If you are married to a European citizen, and will be traveling with them, you do NOT need to pay for the visa. Ever!
You have a Kenyan passport right now? Do you also have a UK issued "certificate of identity" in your passport??? Or just the leave to remain...
Good. Then just ignore their web site.dhcp wrote:residence permit which says limited leave to remain
They may or may check at the border. They can then turn you back. But that should not interfere with further travel done with your partner.mads wrote:So if you are not travelling with your husband, how will they know you did not pay for the visa to start off with?
Directive/2004/38/EC, if they do ask for your EEA spouse, cant the non-EEA family member just claim that he/she paid for the visa and do not have the receipt on person even if the visa was acquired free of charge stating that the spouse will be travelling? Any way that you know of for them to verify about payment information at the border?Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:They may or may check at the border. They can then turn you back. But that should not interfere with further travel done with your partner.mads wrote:So if you are not travelling with your husband, how will they know you did not pay for the visa to start off with?
Apparently it is written in the visa that your EU partner has to accompany you.mads wrote:So if you are not travelling with your husband, how will they know you did not pay for the visa to start off with?
Alan and oscar, it is quite possible that what you have noticed might as well be true. But I am quite troubled with (2) of Article 5 which states:-alan and oscar wrote:I have also had a quick look at the Directive and although Article 3 seems to prescribe that the rights extend (only) to the family members who 'accompany or join them', it is interesting to compare Article 5, the right of entry, where there is no reference to 'accompanying' the EU national with Article 6, the right of residence, where the family member must 'accompany or join' the EU national.
The only instance 'the national law' is applied to non-EEA family members is when they are not travelling or joining their EEA family member. In all other instances whether it be for visit or for residing they are covered by the Directive.Family members who are not nationals of members state shall only be required to have an entry visa in accordance with Regulation(EC) No 539/2001 or, where appropriate, with national law.
From all the input you have given so far and from the information Directive/2004/38/EC has unearthed, its safe to assume that the Schengen territories are not bothered to wrestle over such trivial technicalities and would be glad to issue visas as long as the non-EEA national is a family member of an EEA national.This all may suggest that there may be no such limitation after all
Where is the fun if everything was simple and there is nothing to debate about. Since yours is a long post, I will dissect it and then put across my views.Sorry if this is complicated but I think it is a mess!
I do not think that it is true for a couple of reasons-alan and oscar wrote:the UK seems to be confining the EC family permit (which gives the exemption from a visa requirement) to where the EC national has MOVED to the UK and the family member is going to join or visit him/her.A Spanish national wanting to take his Colombian spouse on holiday to the UK would not seem to be covered. (nor is their even a suggestion that the visa the Colombian would require would be given 'special treatment' under the free/accelerated procedure (ie Reg 12(4) of the 2006 UK Regulations doesn't apply to 'visits')).
From that it is pretty clear that its not necessary that the EEA national must have already moved to the UK and the non-EEA family member must only be joining or visiting him/her to be eligible for the EEA family permit.An entry clearance officer must issue a EEA family permit to a person who applies for one if the person is a family member and -
(a) the EEA national -
(i) is residing in the UK in accordance with these Regulations, or
(ii) will be travelling to the United Kingdom within 6 months of the date of application and will be an EEA national residing in the UK in accordance with these Regulations on arrival in the UK; and
(b) the family member will be accompanying the EEA national to the UK or joining him there .....
I really would not bother read too much into the information posted in the British Embassy's website in Prague as (to borrow a phrase from Dawie) it has more holes in it than a swiss cheese. A simple example-Looking at the UK Regulations and the explanation of the rules on the UK embassy in Prague,
Hold on! Wait a minute! How did visit to the UK for the visa national family member suddenly become "live with you permanently or on long term basis" while the non visa nationals still are only visitors? Magic?Do my family members need an EEA family permit if they are coming to visit me in the UK?
Yes. Your family members will need to get an EEA family permit if they would normally need a visa to travel to the UK or if they are coming to live with you permanently or on a long-term basis. Family members who are not visa nationals do not need an EEA family permit to visit you if their visit will last less than six months.
I hope I have made your hope come true and proved that the above will necessarily be the case. I look forward to any doubts pertaining to the matter.The worrying conclusion may be that the Directive may not (so interpreted) even give the right to a family member to get a tourist visa even when the EU national travelling with him. (free of charge or not) I hope I am wrong but the Spanish national who wants to bring his Colombian partner to the UK for a holiday, may not be able to rely on Directive (unless the Spanish national is planning to live in the UK) and the Colombian partner will have to apply for a UK tourist visa under UK law (as a visa national under UK national law).
The more I look at it the more I believe that you do actually have a point and I have to reluctantly accept that your explanation does make more sense. That way Article 5 does indeed not strictly say that the non-EEA family member has to be accompanied or going to join EEA family member to avail of the free movement.I think the 'national law' referred to in Article 5.2 is the law governing visa nationals for non-Schengen countries such as the UK. Regulation 539/2001 prescribes the list of countries who do and do not require a visa but the UK (and Ireland) opted out of this as it was a necessary due to opting out of Schengen. This means all Schengen countries have the same list of visa nationals (otherwise the system would be unworkable) but the UK (and Ireland) remain entitled to enforce their own (different) lists on who requires a visa according to their own 'national' law.
If someone was to interpret it to say that the family member should be able to free to take up residence in the UK while the EEA family member was in Poland, technically there is a point as there is no mention about the EEA family member having to be with the non-EEA family member in the member state to avail of the rights. I guess we will never know unless someone was to challenge these minute points and find it out for us.The right of all Union citizens to move and reside freely within the territory of the Member States should, if it is exercised under objective conditions of freedom and dignity, be also granted to their family members, irrespective of their nationality.
I do not really believe that what is posted in the Dutch Embassy website to be true. A quick email to the Dutch embassy should clear that even applicants on the spouse/CP visa should get the visa free of charge.So we would have to pay for a Schengen visa from the Dutch embassy in the UK since Oscar does not have (and cannot get) an EEA family permit for the UK. (Though we did get and should still get (according to the Spanish implementing law) a Schengen visa free from the Spanish consulate in the UK, which would also allow us to visit Holland!).
There is no need to confuse yourself more than necessary. As things stand, the Residence Card issued by a country will get the holder entrance into that particular country. But since Holland and Spain is part of "Schengenland" the Residence Card issued by Holland can be used to enter Spain and I will be dumbfounded if the Dutch were to turn away someone with a Residence Card issued By Spain. Again Para(2) of Ariticle 5 could have been better written to specify whether the Residence Card issued by a member state will get the holder into only that particular member state or to all other member states as well.eg does it mean issued by the country you are travelling to (the UK position) or arriving from (seemingly the Dutch position) or issued by any Schengen country (the Spanish position)).
An "EEA family permit for the UK" is definitely not required to get a free schengen visa from the Netherlands. The web site is just plain wrong.alan and oscar wrote:Further to my most recent post, for yet another inconsistent implementation (tho I don't read Dutch and it may be that the website doesn't reflect the law) see the Dutch position at
http://www.netherlands-embassy.org.uk/v ... /visa_fees
Note that an "EEA family permit for the UK" is required to get the schengen visa free.
I am sorry but I absolutely do not agree with you. The non-EEA family member coming for a holiday along with his EEA family member is covered by "Initial right of residence" according to Regulation 13 (2) of the Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2006 or Article 6 (2) of the Directive. For example, if the holiday is for just 1 week, then the EEA national and his family member is considered to be residing for one week. Such family members will be issued the EEA family permit in accordance with the Regulation 12 (1). Residence here is not meant to mean lets-pack-bags-and-make-UK-our-permanent-residence kind of an interpretation.But if the Spanish national is only coming here for a holiday, with no intention of moving here, on my reading of the section, the family member cannot apply for the EEA family permit.
What is interesting to note here is that Oscar got a Schengen visa free of charge from the Spanish embassy and not the Spanish EEA family permit. There is no reason other than the Directive 2004/38/EC for a family member to obtain a visa free of charge from another EEA member state. But then why was it not called a EEA family permit? Because as far as I see it the Directive does not make it compulsory for such entry clearances to be called a EEA family permit. It can also be called visas. Hence the non-UK EEA nationals family member can also be issued a visa free of charge according to the Directive, but since the Immigration (EEA) Regulations call it a EEA family permit, the ECO will issue an EEA family permit in such cases.I would be interested to know if any non-UK EC national has applied for an EEA family permit on behalf of their partner for a holiday to the UK.
Even as a Directive, failure to comply can make the EEA member open to economic sanctions and claims for compensation especially if it were to go to the ECJ. All the problems that currently arises is mostly due to it being a very new Directive rather than it not being a EC Regulation.A shame we had these changes in the form of a Directive rather than an EC Regulation. Then the Member States would have had no choice how to implement.