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Thanks for your response. My husband has travel to the Gerry's office 4 times and told them this four time. He even showed them something in Urdu, the Pakistani language and the letter from the legal caseworker, which details the directives. The only response he gets, is that "we have never seen this before and we have not been notified of this before, so we cannot take your application without complete documents". They won't even accept the application, without these particular documents and a visa fee. Im in the process of making a complaint to the EU Ombudsman about the EU Commission, because 'Your Europe' or 'Solvit', who fall under them have not been helpful at all. What representation do we have or help? Zilch. Its like our rights are on 'paper', but not in practice. Its crazyEUsmileWEallsmile wrote:When you fill in the visa form, there should be "*" against those items not applicable to family members of EU nationals. It's pretty clear and you should try and insist that Gerry's take the application.
Or another tactic try another embassy and skip France?
Thanks for the link. I have emailed them and contacted them on numerous occasions. I get illiterate responses back from them, usually one liners that don't address the issue of my complaint. Thanks for the link though, as at least I know the names of these people I have just submitted an EU Ombudsman complaint about the UK Solvit. Let see what happens! I am not holding my breath, though.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Theoretically, you should be able to make the application directly to the embassy.
Try this page for the names of officials.
http://www.ambafrance-pk.org/Consular-S ... mabad,1965
The holders of diplomatic or official passports, the spouses of the French or of the European Union’s nationals, the ancestors of the French nationals (only for Long Stay Visa), foreign children of the French nationals, visa applications for adoption, for scientists, for returning to France, for medical treatment, will not follow this procedure and should submit directly their visa applications at the Visa Section of the French Embassy in Islamabad without getting an appointment, from Monday to Thursday from 8h30 to 9h30 a.m. and on Friday from 9h00 to 11h00 a.m.
That's what I just was referring to when you posted thisEUsmileWEallsmile wrote:This might interest you.
http://www.ambafrance-pk.org/Procedure- ... y-for-visa
The holders of diplomatic or official passports, the spouses of the French or of the European Union’s nationals, the ancestors of the French nationals (only for Long Stay Visa), foreign children of the French nationals, visa applications for adoption, for scientists, for returning to France, for medical treatment, will not follow this procedure and should submit directly their visa applications at the Visa Section of the French Embassy in Islamabad without getting an appointment, from Monday to Thursday from 8h30 to 9h30 a.m. and on Friday from 9h00 to 11h00 a.m.
OK, in that case, it's back to the phone calls.SRAQAI wrote:Their website even states that spouses of EU Member States do not need an appointment and that they can just come to the embassy Monday to Thursday between 8:30am and 9:30am - lies. Security guard will not even let them near the gate, without evidence that an appointment has been set up. I cannot believe the corruption here.
Yes, I think Ill need to call the French embassy in Pakistan from here and give them a piece of my mind. I emailed them again earlier today, with a firm email along with a link to the directive, and I repeated what I was saying again and again, so that the reader who ever it may be can understand that we require an appointment for a visa application under this directive. I don't know who mans their emails, but their responses seems like someone with a literacy level of a five year old. One of them before simply said in all caps "CONTACT THE GERRY".EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:OK, in that case, it's back to the phone calls.SRAQAI wrote:Their website even states that spouses of EU Member States do not need an appointment and that they can just come to the embassy Monday to Thursday between 8:30am and 9:30am - lies. Security guard will not even let them near the gate, without evidence that an appointment has been set up. I cannot believe the corruption here.
I think your right, this is the impression that I got, too. This is exactly what our problem is, because Gerry's are a local agent, with local people who are not trained in the EU regulations, and hence is stopping us from applying!EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Many of the embassy staff will actually be locals (no disrespect to the locals meant of course). What this means is that they might not be familiar with the regulations or even what the French embassy's website says.
Keep at them and don't give up!
I had and still have the same same case with UK Solvit. Solvits are useless. There is no doubts. Based on my own experiences, I would like to recommend German, the Netherlands or even Spanish embassies to apply a visa for a family member of EU national. Especially Germany. German are very much efficient.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:This is a very difficult problem, and somehow it is very hard to get help from the EC and Solvit.
I would suggest a multi pronged attack.
Often embassies and support organizations like GERRYs hire local staff to do a lot of the client facing work. They are very good at pushing back and giving a hard time to local applicants.
As a native English speaker, you have an advantage. Call yourself and try to burst through the defensive battlements of the person answering the phone.
Keep calling back, again and again. Expect to get NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. and finally at some point you will get YES.
Your goal has to be to get to the professional French embassy staff.
Another option is to get a visa from a more professional embassy. Maybe Germany? You can both reside there for a day or two and then move on to France.
SRAQAI wrote:Their website even states that spouses of EU Member States do not need an appointment and that they can just come to the embassy Monday to Thursday between 8:30am and 9:30am - lies. Security guard will not even let them near the gate, without evidence that an appointment has been set up. I cannot believe the corruption here.
Ask the security team to present the webpage to a French visa official. It's self explanatory that an appointment is not required.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:While I hope this works, the practical problem they appear to be facing is getting past the security team, who appear to just send the applicant packing.vinny wrote:Go to Embassy with printout from their web page
I think the OP is referring to the security personnel at the gates to the diplomatic enclave, not Embassy security.vinny wrote:Ask the security team to present the webpage to a French visa official. It's self explanatory that an appointment is not required.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:While I hope this works, the practical problem they appear to be facing is getting past the security team, who appear to just send the applicant packing.vinny wrote:Go to Embassy with printout from their web page