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There are two aspects to evaluate:SisterNura wrote:I will get married soon to a Senegalese citizen in Senegal. Once married he would like to come to the UK where I live and study as a German citizen. However he was previously deported from the USA and classified a national threat because his mother brought him to the states illegally when he was a child. He has no criminal record and was treated unfair by the US authorities. To make it worse his mother falsely applied for asylum for him in order to get him back to the states, but he didn't fulfill the asylum criteria. Please tell me if there is any way to lift his classification as a national threat and any way to get approval to come to live with me in the UK. We are planning to apply for a EEA family permit for him. It is stated that under legal law, family members of EU citizens in the UK have a right to have their family members (ie spouse) with them in the country. Please advice if his status would nullify this legal right.
Based on your statements, your Fiancée might have been charged with one of the provisions of the Patriot Act, as reauthorized on the Extension Act of 2011. If that is the resulting case, you seriously need to retain an Attorney.SisterNura wrote:thanks for all the answers, I will try to elaborate more.
He has got no convictions/no criminal record. he only spent detention time whilst the authorities sorted out his deportation. he has got no papers whatsoever from the whol process apart from his A-number. he did not deal with narcotics or anything like that.
however he was blackmailed by the authorities to spy on his own muslim community and give them information he refused. i assume this is the reason why they discriminated him and classified him a national threat, then followed by deportation. the asylum issue was after all that. so actually he does not pose a threat to anyone.
we are in the process of requesting more information from the US and filing a complaint form but I doubt we will get much out of it.
Please mind they have changed the language in many provisions to prevent anyone to appeal any ruling. Now in the US, what used to be "disorderly conduct" is now a "terroristic treat"; rejecting to help is now "perverting the course of justice". What I'm advising is to request a copy of their file and seek legal help.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:jrge: That is a rather speculative assertion. We barefuly know some quite vague language, and 3rd hand at that. There are all sorts of things it might be, most of them pretty benign.
I do think it is worth the OP finding out the details from their fiance. Where/when/what happened...
.SisterNura wrote: However he was previously deported from the USA and classified a national threat