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you should have included your passport, not a photocopy. A photocopy is never accepted as proof of ID!sarah82 wrote:...a photocopy of my Irish passport as photographic ID)
countries are certainly not obliged to accept documents in any official EU language. The Netherlands are very generous and accept documents in Dutch, English, French and German; the UK is very restrictive and only accept documents in Englishsarah82 wrote:Quoted Eind Judgement and also had read advise on this forum that there may be no need to translate documents once they're in a European language, so I submitted all my payslips and population registry, bank statements etc, all originals but all in Dutch Neverltheless!)
You can ask for an international extract, which is in (at least) Dutch, English, French and German, from the Dutch population registry. Contact the place where you lived by email for the procedure to follow. Don't bother about bank statements; I don't think they add any weight (except at the postoffice) to your application.sarah82 wrote: So surprise surprise after sending it all on 22/12/2011, on 19/01/2012 We receive all our documents and application form back with a letter saying we should reapply with translations of all the Dutch documents and a British Passport!
Hi Sara how did u get ukba internal border guard advice? My wife is eea citizent, shes from poland, she works there in uk, scotland, but im non eea, im from Serbia...sarah82 wrote:Hi Limi,
I had 3 months worth of Dutch payslips with me but did not produce them at the Calais border as I was travelling on my Irish passport (Dual British/Irish national)
We did supply both our passports which BOTH had Dutch residence stickers in them but my husband did not yet have his Dutch Residence card so I suppose the sticker in his passport was probably the Dutch equivalent of the certificate of application that UK provide when you apply for an EEA RC.
Also our marriage certificate and that was about it BUT my husband was interrogated for almost 5 hours as he has a seven year old criminal conviction from another EU Member state and had been previously extradited from the UK But I think the only thing that drew attention to him was the fact that the marriage certificate was 3 and a half years old and a BRITISH one!
So straight away they knew he had been previously in the UK and therefore started their pryful interrogating, I think had we had married in Holland and arrived at the border he may have not been held for those hours.
But yeah we simply presented our marriage certificate both passports and printouts of the UKBA's internal border guard advice stating that a family member WITHOUT a family permit should be admitted on a stamp code 1A.
If however I had been entering on my British passport I would have had to show my payslips from Holland I guess.
Are you intending to arrive via Calais?
See Q1 in EEA FAQs - Common Questions - Read before posting - EEA Family Permit.slowmotion85 wrote:Hi Sara how did u get ukba internal border guard advice? My wife is eea citizent, shes from poland, she works there in uk, scotland, but im non eea, im from Serbia...
We have marrage certif., passports, but dont have that third paper, CAN we get it at border? Peacd
Jambo wrote:See Q1 in EEA FAQs - Common Questions - Read before posting - EEA Family Permit.slowmotion85 wrote:Hi Sara how did u get ukba internal border guard advice? My wife is eea citizent, shes from poland, she works there in uk, scotland, but im non eea, im from Serbia...
We have marrage certif., passports, but dont have that third paper, CAN we get it at border? Peacd
Please note that she entered by land/ferry from France and did not fly to the UK.