Post
by jamilo » Sat Jul 14, 2012 10:50 pm
Hi everyone:
I need help please after my refusal of EEA Family Permit my wife she wrote letter for British Embassy in Warsaw we need any subjection and any correction in the letter before we will send it on Monday.
Many thanks for your time
The letter is:
My name is B............ born ........ 1982 in the Czech Republic. I did move in UK Sept 2003 to live there permanently, on Apr 2004 in London I did met with my husband X........ born 1975 in the Kosovo, in few month later we start living together in the UK. On 2006 me and my husband I did apply at Home Office for EEA Registry Certificate and EEA Family Member Resident Card for my husband, in 2007 I did get EEA Registry Certificate confirming my right of extended residence in the UK, my husband application it was still on process. In the meantime Home Office ask my husband for passport to process his application, the problem to get passport for my husband was that he has to go back at his home country and get the passport or travel document. In June 2007 my husband went at his home country in the Kosovo and got issued with travel document from UNMIK in the Kosovo for validated of 2years. After he got the travel document he did apply for the UK visa at British Embassy in Skopje in the Macedonia, and he got refused the application that Entry Clearance Officer didn't believe that we are in durable relationship because we didn't submit enough proof to proof our relationship.
At the time I was in Skopje with my husband and we did decided to go at Czech republic Embassy in the Albania and get visa for Czech Republic and after we can go at British Embassy in Prague at the Czech Republic so we can apply there for UK visa. On Jul 2007 my husband got Czech visa and we did go in the Czech Republic, he did apply for the UK visa at British Embassy in Prague on Jul 2007 and he got refused the reason it was again we didn't submit enough documents to proof our relationship. We did reapply again in British Embassy in Prague on September 2007 and we did submit all the documents also DVD for our engaged party, my husband got interview, Entry Clearance Officer was very satisfied with our relationship and issued a visa for 6months EEA family permit.
After all this what happen to us finally we did go to the UK in September 2007 back to our normal life, my husbands EEA Family permit was due to expiry so before expiry on March 2008 he did sent it his travel document at Home Office with supporting documents so he can get Resident Card as Family member of an EEA national which is myself, he did get letter from Home Office confirming his application that is bin accepted and he has to wait for the decision the decision shouldn't take longer than 6months, after one year Home Office send a letter to my husband that he should supply new passport to the Home Office because his Travel Document is due to expiry. To issue Resident Card the Home Office needed Passport with longer validated. My husband he decided to go back in Kosovo and get new passport because back in the UK there wasn't Kosovan Embassy at the time to get a passport, he did go back on April 2009 in the Kosovo and on 01.04.2009 he got Kosovan passport issued from Kosovan authority for 10years of a validity, after his passport he did go at British Embassy in Skopje he apply for EEA Family permit and he got refused, again Entry Clearance Officer not believing our relationship is genuine.
On 08.05.2009 we did get married and we did carry on our life back in Kosovo and I did have to travel from UK to Kosovo every month because I was employed in the UK. In 2010 we did decided to have child in the meantime I got pregnant in 2011 and we did decided I will go back in the Czech Republic at my home land and our child will born there. On 29 March 2012 my husband did apply for EEA Family permit at British Embassy in Prague in the Czech Republic, on 23.05.2012 i give birth to our son T......... in Jilemnice hospital in the Czech Republic, on the 30.05.2012 my husband he did request his passport from British Embassy in Prague so we can register our son to get his birth certificate, he did receive his passport on 07.06.2012 and we did get birth certificate for our son, my husband did send the passport back at British Embassy in Prague on 12.06.2012 after on 02.07.2012 he did receive visa refusal from British Embassy in Warsaw and the refusal is that Entry Clearance Officer refusing visa that we are not in genuine relationship. To me is very clear that Entry Clearance Officer he was well informed about my husband passport requested on 30.05.2012 for the reason that he can register our son. I would like to ask a question to Entry Clearance Officer, can he answer and tell me how it will be a non genuine relationship when I give a birth to my child which is child of my husband? and can anyone have a child in fake relationship???!!!!!! I am very frustrating that him accusing us that we are not in genuine relationship and I would like him to reconsider his decision and issue EEA family permit to my husband soon as possible before I will personally complain to EU Parliament and to UKBA.
I am mother of 7weeks old baby which he gets Brest feeding and I am not in the position to be in stress because this mater.
Again I would ask You please to consider my e-mail inquire and reconsider the visa application because the decision was made against EEA Regulation 2006 and against UKBA's own entry clearance guidance.
Entry Clearance Officer decision : " I therefore refuse your EEA family permit application because I am not satisfied that you meet all of the requirements of Regulation 12 of the Immigration ( European Economic Area) Regulations 2006.”
But Regulation 12 of the Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2006 is very clear to me
12.—(1) An entry clearance officer must issue an EEA family permit to a person who applies for one if the person is a family member of an EEA
national and—
(a) the EEA national—
(i)is residing in the UK in accordance with these Regulations; or
(ii)will be travelling to the United Kingdom within six months of the date of the application and will be an EEA national residing in the United
Kingdom in accordance with these Regulations on arrival in the United Kingdom; and
(b) the family member will be accompanying the EEA national to the United Kingdom or joining the EEA national there.
(2) [relevant only to extended family member]
(3) [relevant only to extended family member]
(4) An EEA family permit issued under this regulation shall be issued free of charge and as soon as possible.
Requirements for a visa (for family members of EU citizen)
For a visa to be issued on the basis of Directive2004/38/EC, only the following requirements need to be satisfied:
1. The visa applicant is a direct “family member” of an EU citizen and has proof (marriage or birth certificate or some combination) of the relationship)
2. The visa applicant will be travelling with, or joining, the EU citizen for a visit or permanent move to an EU member state. (If they are going to the “home” country of the EU citizen, then there can be a requirement that the EU citizen had previously lived/worked in a different member state)
3. All travellers require a passport (or a national ID card for the EU citizen)
These are the legal requirements for all of the EU/EEA member states, including allSchengen members, the UK, Ireland, Romania and Bulgaria. They also apply for Switzerland.
There is no legal requirement that:
· The EU citizen is already (or will be) living or working in a different EU member state
· The non-EU family member holds a specific immigration visa or status. It is fine for them to have a nationally issued visa or a student visa or a visitor’s visa or even implied status
· The family member apply in their country of origin
· The family member resides or previously resided in the EU/EEA (This older requirement of some member states was overturned in several ECJ cases, especially Metock)
There is also no legal requirement that you submit:
· bank statements
· pay slips
· letters from your present or future employer or school
· letters of reference
· proof that you will return at the end of the trip
· airline tickets
· confirmed hotel bookings
references or guarantees from people in the destination country
EUN2.10 What if I suspect a marriage / civil partnership of convenience?
The definition of 'spouse' and 'civil partner' in the EEA Regulations does not include someone who has entered into a marriage / civil partnership of convenience.
When a marriage / civil partnership of convenience is suspected, the burden of proof is high and rests with the ECO. However, in these cases the ECO is entitled to interview the applicant. Factors to consider include:
· an adverse immigration history;
· doubts about the validity of documentation;
· application follows soon after the marriage / civil partnership;
· no previous evidence of the relationship.
The ECO should not consider the following cases as marriages / civil partnerships of convenience where:
· there is a child of the relationship;
· there is evidence to suggest cohabitation.
Yours Sincerely
B.........