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Thanks, but I don't quite get the point. We have no interest in residing in the UK, just visiting. My wife holds permanent Danish residency so really there should be no problems in travel to the UK. (I am a UK national resident in Denmark as well).el patron wrote:If family permit endorsed to 'accompany', the EEA national did not need for the purposes of the family permit application to prove they were a qualified person, as they could rely upon the initial right to reside, in that case however, as exercising treaty rights was not a requirement that needed to be statisfied, subsequent re-entry would arguably need to be under the same terms, i.e. accompanying. An unreasonable rwquirement in my view, but there is a small degree of merit in the Home Office's contrary view I'm afraid. Unless there is a problem evidencing the qualified person status of the EEA national, in such cases were re-entry unaccompied may be required at a later date, forethought should be given to applying to join eea national even when in reality the family member will be accompanying the non-eea family member.
"The question should be, whether or not the person has a right to travel without an EEA family permit or a UK entry clearance." ...and for the benefit of the OP, do they?Obie wrote:It will be perverse for me to dear to step into your area of expertise on airline boarding terms and conditions.
I am merely stating that Airline are not bound to ascertain a person will be granted entry before allowing them to board.
Provided the right documents are in possession of the passenger, that should be the end of the matter, should it not?
In this case the UK regulation states a person with a qualifying EEA state residence card is entitled to travel to the UK without a visa.
That right to enter without visa is not subject to a guarantee of right of admission..
The UK then put a condition on border official to ensure the EEA national has a right of admission under regulation 11 before allowing him or her family members a right of entry into the UK . This approach us consistent with the frontier protocol that exist between the UK and other memberstate, save for Ireland .
What the airline is doing is enquiring if a person will have a right of admission. That is the wrong question in my opinion.
The question should be, whether or not the person has a right to travel without an EEA family permit or a UK entry clearance.