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im confused.. is that means that i , for instance applied for Dutch MVV back in 2005 are not allowed to apply for the residence card??John wrote:The UK says no such thing. Quite a number of EEA Family Permits are issued each year, at British Missions outside the EU or EEA.If you remember, the UK says that for family members to apply for an EEA they must be legally resident in the EU.
No, it doesn't mean that. John is arguing that the UK accepts applications from all countries, including those outside the EU/EEA.ribena wrote:im confused.. is that means that i , for instance applied for Dutch MVV back in 2005 are not allowed to apply for the residence card??John wrote:The UK says no such thing. Quite a number of EEA Family Permits are issued each year, at British Missions outside the EU or EEA.If you remember, the UK says that for family members to apply for an EEA they must be legally resident in the EU.
However, even if the personal conduct of the person concerned does not justify the adoption of measures of public policy or public security within the meaning of Article 27 of Directive 2004/38, the Member State remains entitled to impose other penalties on him which do not interfere with freedom of movement and residence, such as a fine, provided that they are proportionate (see, to that effect, MRAX, paragraph 77 and the case-law cited).
Could it be that Richard66 is referring to the Residence Card, rather than the EEA Family Permit? They are two different documents after all..... Just thinking.sakura wrote:I am confused about Richard66's post, though. I have not seen anything about the UK requiring prior residence in another EU/EEA country. Even on this board, there are quite a number of people who have succesfully applied for an EEA family permit from outside the EU/EEA.ribena wrote:im confused.. is that means that i , for instance applied for Dutch MVV back in 2005 are not allowed to apply for the residence card??John wrote:The UK says no such thing. Quite a number of EEA Family Permits are issued each year, at British Missions outside the EU or EEA.If you remember, the UK says that for family members to apply for an EEA they must be legally resident in the EU.
I am not sure that the judgement does say exactly that. The judgement, as regards this point, was merely pointing out that the Directive allows member Governments to impose a penalty if action is not taken within three months. The Court was not giving new rights to Governments ... it was merely confirming that they have such rights.However, the judgement allows the UK/other respective governments to impose some sort of penalty on those who entered the UK illegally or overstay a visa, and then subsequently apply to 'adjust' their status using the EU directive, without leaving the UK (article 97):
Exactly right. Clearly an EEA Family Permit can be applied for at a British Mission anywhere in the world that the person is resident.No, it doesn't mean that. John is arguing that the UK accepts applications from all countries, including those outside the EU/EEA.
You might be right. Richard can you clarify? If that was indeed what you are saying, then yes, clearly following the judgement counters any query about how the person got into the UK.Could it be that Richard66 is referring to the Residence Card, rather than the EEA Family Permit? They are two different documents after all..... Just thinking.
You might find the discussion over in the Ireland section of interest..John wrote:I am not sure that the judgement does say exactly that..However, the judgement allows the UK/other respective governments to impose some sort of penalty on those who entered the UK illegally or overstay a visa, and then subsequently apply to 'adjust' their status using the EU directive, without leaving the UK (article 97):
Uk will issue a family permit if you apply from outside the EU, but it will require you to satisfy normal immigration rules if you do so. e.g. If your parents apply for EEA family permit from non-EU country, they ma still get that particular stamp in the passport, but to get it they will need to demonstrate that they meet the normal immigration rules such as over 65, etc. Whereas under EU regulations, they will only need to demonstrate relationship and dependency. Current UK regulations are very similar to Ireland in that respect, so this is a great win for all concerned, bravo ECJ.John wrote:The UK says no such thing. Quite a number of EEA Family Permits are issued each year, at British Missions outside the EU or EEA.If you remember, the UK says that for family members to apply for an EEA they must be legally resident in the EU.
No! An EEA Family Permit is only issued to family members in accordance with EU regulations, never in accordance with UK national law. EU law applies at all times to the holders of an EEA Family Permit, not UK law.irishkin wrote:Uk will issue a family permit if you apply from outside the EU, but it will require you to satisfy normal immigration rules if you do so. e.g. If your parents apply for EEA family permit from non-EU country, they ma still get that particular stamp in the passport, but to get it they will need to demonstrate that they meet the normal immigration rules such as over 65, etc. Whereas under EU regulations, they will only need to demonstrate relationship and dependency. Current UK regulations are very similar to Ireland in that respect, so this is a great win for all concerned, bravo ECJ.John wrote:The UK says no such thing. Quite a number of EEA Family Permits are issued each year, at British Missions outside the EU or EEA.If you remember, the UK says that for family members to apply for an EEA they must be legally resident in the EU.
Oh I completely agree with you. The scope for interpretation of EU directives (especially 2004/38/EC), by Member States, is dangerously vast. The recent Irish case is a perfect example. And you're right, in time there's likely to be a precedent set for many unfair interpretations.John wrote:benifa, the unfortunate thing is that the EU regulations leave a lot to be desired..
It's not about imposing own national regulations after a person will arrive into UK. It is about satisfying normal UK immigration rules to get EEA Family Permit when applying outside of the EU. It's more onerous that if you apply from within the EU. You'll get the same stamp in both cases, and requirements for residence cards once in the UK are the same. But under existing regulations, you will simply not get EEA Family Permit if applying from oustide of EU and not meeting normal UK immigration rules. Obviously, this seems in contrast with EU directive, but one had to challenge this, until the Metock case came before ECJ UK was free to do this (as was Ireland).benifa wrote:Oh I completely agree with you. The scope for interpretation of EU directives (especially 2004/38/EC), by Member States, is dangerously vast. The recent Irish case is a perfect example. And you're right, in time there's likely to be a precedent set for many unfair interpretations.John wrote:benifa, the unfortunate thing is that the EU regulations leave a lot to be desired..
What I'm saying is, that the UK (or anywhere) cannot issue an EEA Family Permit visa, in accordance with European legislation, then ignore EU legislation once the family member has arrived in the UK, and start imposing their own national legislation.
Now I understand.irishkin wrote:It's not about imposing own national regulations after a person will arrive into UK. It is about satisfying normal UK immigration rules to get EEA Family Permit when applying outside of the EU. It's more onerous that if you apply from within the EU. You'll get the same stamp in both cases, and requirements for residence cards once in the UK are the same. But under existing regulations, you will simply not get EEA Family Permit if applying from oustide of EU and not meeting normal UK immigration rules. Obviously, this seems in contrast with EU directive, but one had to challenge this, until the Metock case came before ECJ UK was free to do this (as was Ireland).
You can say it was not in the spirit of the EU directive, but that was the way it was, read the EU Casework instructions. Mind you, the good thing was that they explicitly said that one could be within the EU on a tourist visa, not necessarily residence card, but it was still a huge issue, as often family members needed to apply from outside of EU
I still don't think the ruling has much to do with the UK's interpretation. I think what you have relates more to the Akrich ruling than this one. Paragraph 58 of this ruling reads (my bolding):Richard66 wrote:I was absent for a day or two and look at the result! At least a discussion got under way!
You see, I meant just what I said, because I remember (and have copies) of the EEA FP procedure from Italy and that both the Embassy and then the VAC stated in BIG BOLD CAPITALS that "applicants must be legally resident in Italy."
Which means that, if you are applying from another EU/EEA member state, you should have legal status in that member state. Paragraph 16 of the ruling reads (my bolding):It is true that the Court held in paragraphs 50 and 51 of Akrich that, in order to benefit from the rights provided for in Article 10 of Regulation No 1612/68, the national of a non-member country who is the spouse of a Union citizen must be lawfully resident in a Member State when he moves to another Member State to which the citizen of the Union is migrating or has migrated. However, that conclusion must be reconsidered. The benefit of such rights cannot depend on the prior lawful residence of such a spouse in another Member State (see, to that effect, MRAX, paragraph 59, and Case C‑157/03 Commission v Spain, paragraph 2 .
My argument is the distinction between "lawful residence when applying" and "prior lawful residence"....the former does not mean you have to be resident in the EU/EEA - it simply means that, if you are resident in the Union, you should have legal status. The latter is Ireland's approach, which has been ruled illegal.(2) These Regulations shall not apply to a family member unless the family member is lawfully resident in another Member State and is –
(a) seeking to enter the State in the company of a Union citizen in respect of whom he or she is a family member, or
(b) seeking to join a Union citizen, in respect of whom he or she is a family member, who is lawfully present in the State.’