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Thank you "jajanana" I called the Home Office and they said you don't to transfer it on to passport carry both passport and the residency will be OK.jajanana wrote:Please don't bother to transfer your residence to another passport because it will take you more than six months to do it.
Is like you are making a fresh application, it's better for you to carry both passport when you are travelling.
Transfer of residence card or stamp
If you are issued with a new passport and you want your residence card or family member residence stamp transferred to that passport, you will need to make a new application. You must complete the appropriate application form and provide the required supporting documents
There's no need to post this twice, in unrelated threads...Forza_RC wrote:Do EEA2 holders have to queue as other or EU citizens' queue at the UK airports and have their passport stamped every single time they enter the UK?
Went through the Border with no visa.You moved to the UK. That is, you just went across the border? With no visa?
Or did you get an EEA Family Permit issued by the British Embassy in Dublin?
Likewise for the residence card application in 5.1. I haven't seen that before.ECIS, Chapter 6 6.1 wrote:In contrast to the policy governing applications made under the Immigration Rules an application cannot be rejected because the form has not been used or has not been fully completed.
.............can anyone help me on the above topic plsmaverickstoned wrote:hello everyone.i have just joined my wife(polish) from india on a eea family permit. can i apply now for a residency card without enrolling in WRS since it is abolished. also any othe advise will be highly appreciated specially job related...thanks guys
Is this only detrimental if a dual national living in his/her country of nationality has never exercised free movement rights?Tanic wrote:Also new forms for EEA2 include question:
"3.7 Do they also hold British citizenship?"
Seems that they have considered McCarthy Judgement
McCarthy has never work in her life, even if she was an Irish living in Britain, she has never exercising treaty right as a worker or self sufficient or the others, she rely on the tax payers money all her life. If she has ever work she may claim she was working in Britain as an Irish but she has nothing to claim about exercising treaty right even though she has never move, if she had worked she may also say her parent move her to Britain were she was born and as an Irish working in Britain. But nothing to claim about for all the long years of her case that she has ever work even for a month. I wonder the kind of solicitors that deceived her to that extent, well, they were paid by the Legal Aid, because someone not working cannot afford a solicitor so she is qualify for a legal aid. Tax Payers Money.Plum70 wrote:Is this only detrimental if a dual national living in his/her country of nationality has never exercised free movement rights?Tanic wrote:Also new forms for EEA2 include question:
"3.7 Do they also hold British citizenship?"
Seems that they have considered McCarthy Judgement
So say if an EEA national exercising treaty rights in the UK eventually becomes British, he/she doesn`t lose the ability to utilise their EEA nationality alongside being British?
Have I understood this right?
yes u canmaverickstoned wrote:.............can anyone help me on the above topic plsmaverickstoned wrote:hello everyone.i have just joined my wife(polish) from india on a eea family permit. can i apply now for a residency card without enrolling in WRS since it is abolished. also any othe advise will be highly appreciated specially job related...thanks guys
I sent my EEA2 application a couple of weeks ago but have just only realised that I sent the old forms in and not the new ones (June 2011)!!!86ti wrote:And they also have a section now asking for absences. Interestingly there is also this bit now in the ECIS.
Likewise for the residence card application in 5.1. I haven't seen that before.ECIS, Chapter 6 6.1 wrote:In contrast to the policy governing applications made under the Immigration Rules an application cannot be rejected because the form has not been used or has not been fully completed.