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This is wrong: this is what the UK and Ireland want us to understand, but this is NOT what Directive 38/2004 says and this is NOT what the European Commission thinks either. The UK at least is being brought before the European Court of Justice on this count.It is said , if holding a FAMILY MEMBER RESIDENCE CARD from any EU country except from UK and IRELAND, u can visit together or meet the spouse in any EU country also except UK and IRELAND who still requires visa....
Richard66 wrote:This is wrong: this is what the UK and Ireland want us to understand, but this is NOT what Directive 38/2004 says and this is NOT what the European Commission thinks either. The UK at least is being brought before the European Court of Justice on this count.It is said , if holding a FAMILY MEMBER RESIDENCE CARD from any EU country except from UK and IRELAND, u can visit together or meet the spouse in any EU country also except UK and IRELAND who still requires visa....
I actually have a letter from the UK Embassy in Rome which says explicitly that an entry visa for the UK is NOT needed for immigration, but for the carrier!
Yes, Christian, what the ministry told me was what we (the people affected by the Directive in this forum and others) already knew for some time now. But it is still worthwile to get official confirmation.ca.funke wrote:What the Autrian "ministry of foreign affairs", as per above post by "86ti", sais is 100% correct ... If the ministry can only answer this after "extensive research"
ca.funke wrote:The practical problem all affected people face is, that this is too complicated.
In reality, that might be the real challenge. Provided, of course, that the airline had let you boarded their plane.ca.funke wrote:...how should border-guards know about the specifics? ... I dare to say that I understood these specifics by now too, but how should you convince a boarder-guard that you know more about this than he does?!
The problem with the countries that are inside the EU but outside Schengen (namely Ireland, UK, Cyprus, Bulgaria and Romania), is, that their case is so special:86ti wrote:It seems to work within the Schengen countries. So why would the residence cards of two more countries matter that much? And, as far as I understand is that all residence card are supposed to have the same format (I think there is a EU regulation about this).
I was under the impression that all residence permits have the same appearance. The Suisse have a long list with picture examples on their official web page for all visa/residence permits they accept and it seems to work for them. I don't really see why it shouldn't work in the other European countries.ca.funke wrote: According to 2004/38/EC, the residence permits issued by the 5 "special" countries are not valid as a visa under all circumstances: They are only valid ifFurthermore, the residence-permit has to be issued according to 2004/38/EC. In the UK this is called "EEA-familiy-residence-permit" and comes in the form of a sticker in the passport, in Ireland this is called "EU-4-Fam" and comes in the form of a separate credit-card-sized card. I don't know about Cyprus, Bulgaria and Romania.
- the 3-rd-country national is a family member of an EU-citizen AND
- they live together
- in a country other than that of which the EU-national is a citizen.
### ### ### general ### ### ###86ti wrote:I was under the impression that all residence permits have the same appearance. The Suisse have a long list with picture examples on their official web page for all visa/residence permits they accept and it seems to work for them. I don't really see why it shouldn't work in the other European countries.
The bold passages are incorrect, because:Estonian Embassy Dublin (correct as of August 07th 2008, 17h20 Irish time) wrote:...Citizens of third countries, who in addition to the valid passport of the country of their citizenship present the Swedish residence card, which has been issued pursuant to the Directive 2004/38/EC of the EU Parliament and the Council bearing a text "Family member of a Union citizen" may enter Estonia without a visa in case they travel to Estonia from another EU member state. Abolition of visas is applied only in case the family member travels together: 1. with the EU citizen or 2. to the EU citizen (in that case residence information of the EU citizen in Estonia has to be included into the National Population Register of Estonia). Visa-free stay may last up to 90 days during six months. The mentioned residence card does not allow the holder to cross the external border of EU without a visa...
We'll soon try to fly to Latvia and then go to Estonia. According to information from Ryanair (we asked directly at Liverpool Airport) they'll let us board. Let's see what the Latvians will do. We may have to visit my in-laws in St. Peterburg but I hesitate to attempt to re-enter the EU through the Russian-Estonian border.ca.funke wrote:Oh - I just happened to find this link to the Estonian embassy in London (earlier in this thread). This is an example of correct and easy to understand information. But: Will the airline let you board? Will the border-guard on arrival in Estonia let you pass? ...
Good point! I sent a similar request to the London embassy. I think this text is the same for all their embassy web pages.ca.funke wrote:The mentioned residence card does not allow the holder to cross the external border of EU without a visa... (4)
4. It should be possible to cross the external EU-border, at least from the Estonian side. Whatever may be the rules of Russia is a totally different and unrelated topic.
Stealing from another earlier post, this is the link to the most organised folks of them all, the Swiss.86ti wrote:What is actually written on those Irish cards? How do they look like?
Quick response from them!86ti wrote:Good point! I sent a similar request to the London embassy. I think this text is the same for all their embassy web pages.ca.funke wrote:The mentioned residence card does not allow the holder to cross the external border of EU without a visa... (4)
4. It should be possible to cross the external EU-border, at least from the Estonian side. Whatever may be the rules of Russia is a totally different and unrelated topic.
The information about the UK residence card is now under http://www.estonia.gov.uk/consular_info ... nformationEstonian Embassy London wrote:This residence card [note: British Residence Card of a family member of an EEA national] allows you to enter estonia from any country, be it russia or latvia.
Sorry for putting up a stoopid question:ca.funke wrote:Stealing from another earlier post, this is the link to the most organised folks of them all, the Swiss.86ti wrote:What is actually written on those Irish cards? How do they look like?
Clicking on "Irland/Irlande/Irlanda/Ireland" will open a .pdf with all the different cards.
Page 5/6 shows an 4EUFam card.
Why is not everyone as organised as the Swiss?
Good timing that you reply with this nowRichard66 wrote:As a lawyer (non-practising), I can tell you it's not the name that defines what a document is, but what the document itself actually says. After all, if you get a document saying: "birth certificate" and in it you read "Fish and Chips 55p" is that a birth certificate or a menu?
If a document has all the characteristics of the "residence card reffered to in Article 10", does it cease to be a residence card because it is called a dandelion?
A little story... I'm having a field day with my landlady, who gave me a contract with a certain name in the vain hope that it was the name that defined the contact. She now stands to lose €20,000 because of her mistake.This is exactly the question the Luxemburgish representative raised and is (hopefully) currently investigating. Read >>here<<. I never thought this would become relevant, now it is
Richard66 wrote:Interesting that... Have these documents been changed recently? I noticed in all texts (except for the regulations) of the UK Border Agency no mention to EEA FPs. Or do they mean that for short-stays these family members need a tourist visa?