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If your sponsor leaves UK you are correct, you will have no basis to reside, work or study in UK under EU rules.Garth1989 wrote:Hi Everyone
This may seem like a strange question but it is a potential reality for me. I am currently on a RP as of September 2015.I applied as a dependent child over the age of 21years. My EEA sponsor (my father) is potentially going to leave the UK during the course of this year in order to pursue a business opportunity in Dubai thus will no longer be exercising.
My question is how does this effect my immigration status ?. I see that in order for me to obtain PR in a few years time I will need to show that my sponsor EEA national has been exercising treaty rights during that period . I am finishing a very specialised financial qualification in June next year and will be looking to work in the UK after that, is it possible to switch to a Tier 2 visa from RP in order to remain in the UK in my own capacity ?. In practice I could remain in the UK until the RP expires without anyone really knowing that my sponsor EEA national is no longer in the UK. However, I guess it will lead to complications after that time period has expired ?.
Any comments will be greatly appreciated
Cheers
.A direct descendant will meet the conditions of regulation 10(3) when:
...
they were attending an educational course in the UK immediately before the qualified person, or the EEA national with a permanent right of residence,
died or ceased to be qualified and they continue to attend that course.
Iv had a look at the retained right of residency documentation. It only makes reference to a child a of an EEA nation and not to a dependent child 21 years and over. According to what I can make out from it, every member of the family is basically eligible for RoR i.e divorced spouse, parents, grand parents, grand children etc if they can meet the requirements of the sponsor leaving the Uk or them dying,,, except for a child over the age of 21 years !!. Im not sure if I am reading it correctly ?, but thats the way its seems.noajthan wrote:There is an option to retain rights of residence (RoR) if Regulaton 10(3) applies.
See HO guidance:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... _clean.pdf
- see page 10+
.A direct descendant will meet the conditions of regulation 10(3) when:
...
they were attending an educational course in the UK immediately before the qualified person, or the EEA national with a permanent right of residence,
died or ceased to be qualified and they continue to attend that course.
Adult 'children' (over 21) are still classed as direct family members if there is a demonstrable/proven dependency on the sponsor.Garth1989 wrote:Iv had a look at the retained right of residency documentation. It only makes reference to a child a of an EEA nation and not to a dependent child 21 years and over. According to what I can make out from it, every member of the family is basically eligible for RoR i.e divorced spouse, parents, grand parents, grand children etc if they can meet the requirements of the sponsor leaving the Uk or them dying,,, except for a child over the age of 21 years !!. Im not sure if I am reading it correctly ?, but thats the way its seems.
I qualify under every requirement such as in being in an educational course and will be continuing education as well as having lived with the EEA national for more than a year, except that I am no longer technically a child of the EEA national if the age requirement is 21 years and under.
Thank you noajthan, Im going to investigate this route an see what happens, I might contact a solicitor in order to get their opinion.noajthan wrote:Adult 'children' (over 21) are still classed as direct family members if there is a demonstrable/proven dependency on the sponsor.Garth1989 wrote:Iv had a look at the retained right of residency documentation. It only makes reference to a child a of an EEA nation and not to a dependent child 21 years and over. According to what I can make out from it, every member of the family is basically eligible for RoR i.e divorced spouse, parents, grand parents, grand children etc if they can meet the requirements of the sponsor leaving the Uk or them dying,,, except for a child over the age of 21 years !!. Im not sure if I am reading it correctly ?, but thats the way its seems.
I qualify under every requirement such as in being in an educational course and will be continuing education as well as having lived with the EEA national for more than a year, except that I am no longer technically a child of the EEA national if the age requirement is 21 years and under.
My understanding is RoR can apply if the education path from school to college/university has been uninterrupted.