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Charles, the EU is one thing and the Schengen is another. Switzerland is not a member of the EU (as most Schengen states are) but has certain bilateral agreements with them. Switz. has however joined the Schengen Area and therefore can issue visas in line with the Schengen Agreement NOT the EU Diective. As such, anyone who would ordinarily require a visa to enter a schengen state will require a visa to enter Switzerland.The EU and Schengen now follow the same rules so the EU Directive 2004/38/EC works for the both.
These sort of permits are no longer compatible as Switz. now operates in accordance with the entry requirements of the Schengen Agreement.UK residence cards were valid as short stay visas before, why is it now different?
The same applied for holders of long-stay American visas. Are we to understand they also can no longer enter Swizerland?
Not that I want to brag about this but the second paragraph you quote is actually mine... Of course, with the help of the many people on this and other boards who gave me all that valuable information.Plum70 wrote:I also found this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schengen_Agreement which corroborates your thinking...
Directive 2004/38 is not applicable to Switzerland and they are not making new laws. I think your suggestion is more relevant to those EU member states who should implement the directive correctly.charles4u wrote:
I think they need some court case as a new member so they can know what is good and what is bad instead coming new and making new laws, they shouldn't have joined in the first place if they will make things more arduous.
I am happy they don't accept UK's not other EU member that fully implement EU and Schengen regulations (Romania, Bulgaria and Cyprus), Visas from this countries can transit Schengen countries and family card is valid as visa-free under EU directive. They are full member with no subjections.flyboy wrote:Directive 2004/38 is not applicable to Switzerland and they are not making new laws. I think your suggestion is more relevant to those EU member states who should implement the directive correctly.charles4u wrote:
I think they need some court case as a new member so they can know what is good and what is bad instead coming new and making new laws, they shouldn't have joined in the first place if they will make things more arduous.
Strangely in your reply on the following thread http://www.immigrationboards.com/viewtopic.php?t=33460 , you are happy about switzerland not accepting the residence cards and on here it is a completely different story.
ohh I see, Thanks for the clarification....Thank God its just Switzerland..flyboy wrote:If you read the link you provided carefully, it states that residence permits / schengen visas issued by states implementing the Schengen agreement , as well as long or short national visas , residence permits issued by cyprus, are acceptable for transiting through bulgaria and romania, and that documents issued by romania and bulgaria will be accepted for transit through either country as well as cyprus and not the schengen area.
Non EU/EEA family members holding residence cards as a family member of EU/EEA citizen issued by UK / Ireland / Bulgaria / Romania / Cyprus , will have to apply for a schengen visa for switzerland.
As mentioned, Directive 2004/38 is not applicable to switzerland.