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No, I do not think that is the right category for you. European law applies only if at least two European member states are involved, e.g. if a Dutch person works in the UK. If your case only involves the UK and non-EEA countries, you have to follow the national legislation.kevin23 wrote:I'm a 24 year old non-EEA national whose parents have acquired British citizenship recently ... Is it OK to apply for a EEA2 residence permit and are the chances good?
Nobody claimed that it is not possible to exercise treaty rights in one's own country - I am (and many others are) already aware of this, but the point is that unless his parents have had some sort of activity in another EU country (i.e. residence or something job related as in Carpenter), then he cannot use the EU directive.sms82 wrote:You can exercise your treaty rights in your own Member State, it is possible! See case c-60/00 Mary Carpenter v Secretary of State for the Home Department. But you will need legal advice about it. Contact a lawyer who deals with EU law to pursue this.
I just wanted to be sure that kevin23 knew this and could look into the matter further if there were indeed a link. Because the rules for EU family dependency are much easier to fulfil than UK dependency.sakura wrote:Nobody claimed that it is not possible to exercise treaty rights in one's own country - I am (and many others are) already aware of this, but the point is that unless his parents have had some sort of activity in another EU country (i.e. residence or something job related as in Carpenter), then he cannot use the EU directive.sms82 wrote:You can exercise your treaty rights in your own Member State, it is possible! See case c-60/00 Mary Carpenter v Secretary of State for the Home Department. But you will need legal advice about it. Contact a lawyer who deals with EU law to pursue this.