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The following supporting documents are required:
* ORGINAL DOCUMENTS MUST BE SUBMITTED WHEN REQUESTED. PHOTOCOPIES ARE NOT ACCEPTABLE. (Original documents will be returned by registered post once a decision has been made).
* printed copy of your online application form
* application fee (if applicable) and postage fee
* one recent passport photograph with a white background (not more than six months old)
* your current passport (containing a valid Irish re-entry visa, unless you arent returning to Ireland or you have a 4EUFam stamp on your Garda National Immigration Bureau (GNIB) Certificate of Registration card)
* your old passport (or a copy of it)
* a photocopy of your current GNIB Certificate of Registration Card
* your original marriage certificate
* your original birth certificate
* your original sponsors (EEA family member) passport (or a certified copy of all pages)
* your original bank statement showing at least three months of recent transactions
* an original letter from your employer stating how long you have been employed in Ireland or original payslips for the past three months
* if the EEA family member (e.g. your spouse) is resident in Ireland, evidence of their economic and employment circumstances (ie. original bank statement in their name showing at least three months of transactions and an original letter from their employer or original recent payslip) OR
* if the EEA family member (e.g. your spouse) is resident outside Ireland, evidence of their economic and employment circumstances (i.e. original bank statement in their name showing at least three months of transactions and an original letter from their employer and original recent payslip)
* evidence you are living with the EEA family member (e.g. utility bills / tenancy / mortgage documents in joint names)
* if you are travelling to the UK together, your original travel booking or other evidence you are travelling together
5. This is a summary of the cost of your Application, which you will need to pay:
Visa Fee:
EUR 0.00
Postage Fee:
EUR 0.00
Total:
EUR 0.00
Hi Ed,nrubdarb wrote:Hi Folks!
I, too, am very interested in this topic!
As I have recently posted elsewhere, as far as I can see, the so-called Family Permit is nothing other than a 6-month entry visa in sheep's clothing. It is however, nothing like the visa description quoted in vinny's link on the Schengen situation:
"This visa should be granted free of charge and without undue formalities by the competent consulate authorities."
Unless the UK has redefined "undue formalities" to mean "fill out a 17-page document*, then travel 800 km** to get fingerprinted and biometrically scanned before we even consider your application".
Is there anything I can do to help - like writing a letter? I would really love to do something.
My situation: living in Germany (> 8 years), Brit, wife Russian. She has a Schengen visa (but could easily apply for a residence card i.e. Aufenthaltserlaubnis for Germany since she has been here 3 years, is working and intends to settle here with me).
Cheers,
Ed
* The VAF form for the Family Permit is 17 A4 pages long.
** We live 400 km from Düsseldorf, the nearest VAC where we have friends nearby (so at least we don't have to stay in a hotel). Even the nearest VAC is 300 km away (Berlin).
Thus, taking the marriage-certificate might suffice?!Before an Immigration Officer refuses admission to a non-EEA national under
Regulation 11(2) because s/he does not produce an EEA family permit, the IO must
give the non-EEA national reasonable opportunity to provide by other means proof
that he/she is a family member of an EEA national with a right to accompany that
national or join him/her in the UK.
Sehr geehrte Damen und Herren,
in folgender Sache reiche ich hiermit eine Beschwerde gegen das Vereinigte Königreich von Großbritannien und Nordirland ein:
Regulierung 2004/38/EC sagt in Artikel 5 Absatz 2 folgendes:
### ### ### ### ### ### ### ###
Von Familienangehörigen, die nicht die Staatsangehörigkeit
eines Mitgliedstaats besitzen, ist gemäß der Verordnung
(EG) Nr. 539/2001 oder gegebenenfalls den einzelstaatlichen
Rechtsvorschriften lediglich ein Einreisevisum zu fordern. Für
die Zwecke dieser Richtlinie entbindet der Besitz einer gültigen
Aufenthaltskarte gemäß Artikel 10 diese Familienangehörigen
von der Visumspflicht.
### ### ### ### ### ### ### ###
Dadurch ergibt sich, wie die Kommissionswebseite präzisiert, dass Familienangehörige eines EU-Bürgers, die im Besitz einer gültigen Aufenthaltskarte aus irgendeinem Mitgliedstaat sind, in allen Mitgliedstaaten von der Visumpflicht befreit sind.
Dies sieht das UK anders:
2004/38/EC wird im UK durch SI 2006 No.1003 umgesetzt.
Unter "Part 2" - Artikel 11 Absatz 2 Punkt a und b heisst es hier:
### ### ### ### ### ### ### ###
(2) A person who is not an EEA national must be admitted to the United Kingdom if he is a family member of an EEA national, a family member who has retained the right of residence or a person with a permanent right of residence under regulation 15 and produces on arrival—
(a) a valid passport; and
(b) an EEA family permit, a residence card or a permanent residence card
### ### ### ### ### ### ### ###
Zu Besuchsreisen wird hier von Familienangehörigen immer die genannte "EEA-family-permit"-Genehmigung verlangt.
Zwar wird die "residence-card" aufgezählt, in der Praxis wird aber nur eine britische "residence-card" anerkannt.
Es wäre schön hier eine Änderung herbeizuführen, so dass "residence cards" aller Mitgliedsstaaten explizit anerkannt werden.
In der aktuellen Situation entfaltet sich der Freiheitsgedanke der Regulierung nicht.
Gruß aus Dublin (...)
I found case C-294/07, Commission v Luxembourg, failure to comply with the Directive here.Richard66 wrote:I can tell you more: the case has already been brought before the ECJ and is awaiting judgement, as I have mentioned in another post.
I also lodged a complaint with the European Commission. There was no way the UK was making me apply for this scam visa.
Do all of the following:nrubdarb wrote:Is there anything I can do to help - like writing a letter? I would really love to do something.
Is it possible that this is included in case C-122/08 (Commision vs. UK)? The Curia web page doesn't give any detail except that the UK failed to implement the Directive.ca.funke wrote:just to let the Forum know:
I did not forget this topic, and should I ever receive a reply from the commission, I will post it here.
However, so far there was no further reply... I asked for an update recently, however to this there was equally no reply yet.
Just learned that the case was obviously withdrawn from the ECJ's register on the 17th of December 2008. Source: http://www.ukresident.com/forums/index. ... t&p=225286Richard66 wrote:Sorry! Only seen today:
Yes, case C-122/08 (Commision vs. UK) is the one I am talking about. Is there any news?EDIT: Is this the case you are refering to Richard66?