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1) A COA is not a travel document.ijjlian wrote:Hello all,
I am a non-EEA national married to an EU citizen. I currently have a CoA (Certificate of Apoplication) from the UK Home Office.
I and my husband need to travel outside the UK for a naturalisation exam during this month. One of the options is Ireland.
I was wondering whether:
1) Can I enter Ireland with the CoA from UK if I am travelling with my spouse?
2) If (1) is not possible, can I apply for a EEA Family Permit to travel together with my EU-spouse to Ireland to take the exam?
If I travel to a Schengen country instead, can I apply for a EU family visa (aka EEA Family Permit)?
Thanks for input. We have been contacting a lot of authorities but information provided is very confusing.
Many thanks for this answer.noajthan wrote:
2) No, a FP is a UK document used to enter UK not to enter Ireland.
For Schengen country apply for a Schengen visa.
You can only submit an EU Id in lieu of passport if an EEA national.ijjlian wrote:Many thanks for this answer.
Given that I only hold a UK CoA, can I apply for a visa for the family member of an EEA national for Ireland?
( see: http://www.inis.gov.ie/en/INIS/Pages/Fa ... 20citizens )
I tried dicussing this with many embassies but they keep saying that I cannot apply for this type of visa. Is this correct?
What kind of visa do I then need to apply for?
I cannot believe that it seems to be in everyway restricted that I travel anywhere else while waiting for my residence card for 6 months in the UK.
This sounds unreal.
As a side note, I still hold a German residence card but it has been already over 6 months since I moved to the UK. (My first application in the UK for the 5-year RC was refused as I stupidly didnt submit my passport but my ID by misinterprting the guidance)
If you are a non-EEA national
... does not hold a document called “Residence card of a family member of a Union citizen” as referred to in Articles 5(2) and 10(1) of Directive 2004/38/EC on the rights of citizens of the Union and their family members to move and reside freely within the territory of Member States
ohara wrote:Schengen visa does not apply to Ireland as they are not party to the Schengen agreement.
How do you possess a UK CoA and not have a residence card
Travelling together is fine, that's similar to joining or moving to Eire (together).ijjlian wrote:I read on Irish website that my EU spouse should be moving to or residing in IReland for me to apply for a EU spouse visa under the directive.
Is this correct?
Can I not apply if we are travelling together to Ireland?
Any ideas please. I do not want to risk getting a visa refusal.
The linked post (above) was more about entering UK. But principle remains the same.ijjlian wrote:Hello again,
noajthan, I was just wondering something in case I do not have time to apply for a EU spouse visa to Ireland.
Can I use the same method you explain in the post below. You have a good entry dated Sun Aug 14, 2016 5:25 pm.
( http://www.immigrationboards.com/eea-ro ... 14749.html )
I think my Dutch husband and I might try entering Ireland from seaborder with all documentation at hand once I receive my passport back from Home Office.
Is there a worse-case scenario than that we could be refused entry?
We are really counting on this trip for my naturalisation as a Dutch citizen and we need to make it work. :/