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HelloBenzino78 wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:29 amHi everyone! Seeking advice here.
I am a British citizen who is trying to assist my brother to relocate to Germany. He is married with 3 children. Will it be better for me to :
1 . Relocate to Germany first and then invoke the EU directive?
2. Relocate to Germany, get university admission for my brother and then invoke the EU directive? I see getting his family to Germany incredibly difficulty as a student. Please advise.
Kind regards,
Ben
@Zerubbabel The OP has posted various scenarios for bringing his brother, sister-in-law and 3 children into three different EU countries, including France where his Nigerian mother is currently stuck without any legal residence.Zerubbabel wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 1:30 pmHelloBenzino78 wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:29 amHi everyone! Seeking advice here.
I am a British citizen who is trying to assist my brother to relocate to Germany. He is married with 3 children. Will it be better for me to :
1 . Relocate to Germany first and then invoke the EU directive?
2. Relocate to Germany, get university admission for my brother and then invoke the EU directive? I see getting his family to Germany incredibly difficulty as a student. Please advise.
Kind regards,
Ben
EU Directive has nothing to do with studies. So studies or not, that's not relevant really.
That Directive is very difficult to invoke to entire families. You can invoke it for your partner and your kids. In some remote cases, it may work for a single adult where there is a history and circumstances that justify it. But I have never seen it successfully working for an entire relative his own family.
Oh! Thank you for the heads up. I think I responded to a few posts without realizing they are from the same person.Casa wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:09 pm@Zerubbabel The OP has posted various scenarios for bringing his brother, sister-in-law and 3 children into three different EU countries, including France where his Nigerian mother is currently stuck without any legal residence.Zerubbabel wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 1:30 pmHelloBenzino78 wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:29 amHi everyone! Seeking advice here.
I am a British citizen who is trying to assist my brother to relocate to Germany. He is married with 3 children. Will it be better for me to :
1 . Relocate to Germany first and then invoke the EU directive?
2. Relocate to Germany, get university admission for my brother and then invoke the EU directive? I see getting his family to Germany incredibly difficulty as a student. Please advise.
Kind regards,
Ben
EU Directive has nothing to do with studies. So studies or not, that's not relevant really.
That Directive is very difficult to invoke to entire families. You can invoke it for your partner and your kids. In some remote cases, it may work for a single adult where there is a history and circumstances that justify it. But I have never seen it successfully working for an entire relative his own family.![]()
Zerubbabel wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:23 pmOh! Thank you for the heads up. I think I responded to a few posts without realizing they are from the same person.Casa wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:09 pm@Zerubbabel The OP has posted various scenarios for bringing his brother, sister-in-law and 3 children into three different EU countries, including France where his Nigerian mother is currently stuck without any legal residence.Zerubbabel wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 1:30 pmNever helpful when a member opens multiple threads.Benzino78 wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:29 amHi everyone! Seeking advice here.
I am a British citizen who is trying to assist my brother to relocate to Germany. He is married with 3 children. Will it be better for me to :
1 . Relocate to Germany first and then invoke the EU directive?
2. Relocate to Germany, get university admission for my brother and then invoke the EU directive? I see getting his family to Germany incredibly difficulty as a student. Please advise.
Kind regards,
Ben![]()
Hello
EU Directive has nothing to do with studies. So studies or not, that's not relevant really.
That Directive is very difficult to invoke to entire families. You can invoke it for your partner and your kids. In some remote cases, it may work for a single adult where there is a history and circumstances that justify it. But I have never seen it successfully working for an entire relative his own family.![]()
Never helpful when a member opens several threads!Casa wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:25 pmZerubbabel wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:23 pmOh! Thank you for the heads up. I think I responded to a few posts without realizing they are from the same person.Casa wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 2:09 pm@Zerubbabel The OP has posted various scenarios for bringing his brother, sister-in-law and 3 children into three different EU countries, including France where his Nigerian mother is currently stuck without any legal residence.Zerubbabel wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2019 1:30 pm
Never helpful when a member opens multiple threads.![]()
Hello
EU Directive has nothing to do with studies. So studies or not, that's not relevant really.
That Directive is very difficult to invoke to entire families. You can invoke it for your partner and your kids. In some remote cases, it may work for a single adult where there is a history and circumstances that justify it. But I have never seen it successfully working for an entire relative his own family.![]()