>>the Commission decided to launch an infringement procedure against the UK<< concerning the (non-)acceptance of family member residence cards for entry into the UK.
Full timeline:
- On January 29th 2008 complaint against the UK filed.
- On January 30th 2008 the Commission acknowledged receipt and issued the following handling number SG/CDC/2008/A/1076.
- On April 04th 2008 complaint specified as follows:
For visiting-purposes, the UK always asks for the UK-issued "EEA-family-permit".complaint (original in German, translation by me) wrote:Dear Madam or Sir,
I hereby specify my complaint against the UK:
Directive 2004/38/EC, Article 5, Section 2, (available >>here<<) states:
The comissions' website clarifies this part as follows (it was written on their website in 2008, >>no longer<<):Family members who are not nationals of a Member State
shall only be required to have an entry visa
(...)
For the purposes of this Directive, possession of
the valid residence card referred to in Article 10 shall exempt
such family members from the visa requirement.
(...)
The UK has a different interpretation:YOU MIGHT BE REQUIRED TO HAVE AN ENTRY VISA
Family members holding nationality of certain countries, which are subject to visa obligation, may be required to have an entry visa.
(...)
Possession of the valid residence card, referred to in the relevant fact sheet, issued by any Member State, exempts you from the visa obligation not only in the Member State which issued the residence card, but in all Member States.
(...)
In the UK, 2004/38/EC is executed through SI 2006 No.1003. (>>available here<<)
[quote="SI 2006 No.1003, "Part 2" - Article 11 Section 2 Points a and b"](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
While the "residence-card" is listed, in practice only british "residence-cards" are accepted.
The UK should be prompted to change this, so "residence cards" of all memberstates are accepted, as demanded by the law.
In the current situation, the spirit of freedom intended by the directive is not unfolded.[/quote]
- On April 14th 2008 the >>Commission replied<<.
- very short summary: We´ll deal with it.
- after that I continually asked for updates, but got nothing back
- On April 26th 2011 (no kidding, 3 (three) years later!) the >>Commission replied again<<.
- very short summary: We´ll deal with it.
- I fail to see what happened in the 3 years. To me the answers, although worded differently, sound pretty much identical.
- On July 10th 2011 I ask the Commission
---------- Original message ----------
From: Christian
Date: 10 July 2011
Subject: SG/CDC/2008/A/1076 --- Complaint against the UK
To: home-chap@ec.europa.eu
Dear Madam or Sir,
Dear Chiara Adamo,
on 28th March 2011 I enquired what is the current state of affairs concerning my complaint SG/CDC/2008/A/1076 against the United Kingdom, originally lodged 29th January 2008.
In this matter I would like to thank you for your reply as of 26th April 2011 (see >>here<<). In your reply you mention that the Commission "drew attention of the UK authorities" on the particular issue concerning Article 5(2) of Directive 2004/38/EC at a bilateral meeting on 5th July 2010, also mentioning that "infringement proceedings against the UK" might be considered...
Allow me to draw your attention to a letter I received from the Commission on 14th April 2008, thus about 3 (three) years before your current reply (see >>here<<): In this letter I was informed that the Commission contacted UK authorities on 27th March 2007 concerning the misinterpretation of Article 5(2) of Directive 2004/38/EC, and "does not find" "the UK authorities" "arguments convincing and envisages pursuing this particular point".
It would be enlightening to learn what happened, in this matter, between 14th April 2008 (first letter), and 26th April 2011 (second letter).
Thanks for any possible information, Regards,
- On July 11th 2011 the >>Commission replied<<.
- very short summary: Infringement case opened...