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So this Directive will not change the position at all, as regards the UK and Ireland.25) In accordance with Articles 1 and 2 of the Protocol on the position of the United Kingdom and Ireland, annexed to the Treaty on European Union and to the Treaty establishing the European Community, and without prejudice to Article 4 of the said Protocol, these Member States are not participating in the adoption of this Directive and are not bound by or subject to its application.
Well, if the Schengen agreement is anything to go by, then I doubt other member states will recognise a UK residence permit. The UK and Ireland kind of went "talk to you" to the idea of Schengen and the main consequence of that is that any type of UK visa does not grant you access to the Schengen area if your nationality requires a Schengen visa. I suspect this was more out of spite than anything else from side of the countries who did sign up to Schengen because as almost anyone who has had to apply for both a UK and a Schengen visa can tell you, the UK authorities are definitely far stricter when it comes to issuing visas than their Schengen counterparts and therefore you would logically think that if you had a UK visa it should be more than enough proof to allow you to enter the Schengen space without requiring another visa. Unfortunately logic does not always apply to immigration issues.Third, there must be some understanding or standardised legal interpretation of the not participating and not bound by or subject to expressions.
If you yell and scream, then I agree you will be escorted out, and rightly so.Dawie wrote:That's all well and good but the reality is you can wave around a copy of Directive 2004/38/EC, threaten to sue everyone from the airline's CEO to the check-in assistant, yell and scream until you're blue in the face, but all you will achieve is an armed escort out of the terminal building and a missed flight.
Adel wrote:The European Commision has expressly stated its own view of its directive therefore any legal action as a result of infringements is a foregone conclusion in favour of the EU spouse and Non EU family member,apparently prior to the dawning of the directive,there were various petitions and legal questions surrounding why the holders of i.e Belgian EU(family member) residence cards couldnt enter the UK and vice versa and the EU commision held that it is not until Directive 2004/38/EC becomes a legal instrument that this would be possible.I was given casefiles to read up on pertaining to this and can confirm that there was no legal instrument that provided for entry solely on that account.
There are a couple of things that should be noted here. The European Parliament can say anything they want, but infact it is they who is acting coy about the whole thing.There is nothing theoretical about the Directive,once again,I stress that before the act came into being as far back as 2004,the European Parliament had actually been announcing that the advent of the directive would give rise to the benefits that member states are playing coy over,The European Parliament advocates this:Marriage certificate,Residence card if applicable and passport
But instead all it says is,For the purposes of this Directive, possession of a valid residence card issued by any member state referred to in the Article 10 shall exempt such family members from the visa requirement.
Actually, if a member state has already let such a family member in the first time, it should be able to block attempts of subsequent entries by citing (2) of the Article and saying that if the visa was not required every time, then there is no point in having that particular paragraph... and the Directive would support their claim as well.For the purposes of this Directive, possession of the valid residence card refered to in the Article 10 shall exempt such family members from the visa requirement.
Not relevant to Europe, but how broad is this right to sue an airline when boarding is wrongly denied? Denied on the ground of spurious immigration requirements, that is.Adel wrote:If they do not allow you on board,they are infringing on your air passenger rights and are therefore liable for litigation,Ignorance of the law is not an excuse especially if (as I was told by the commision)the people in question politely and clearly explain the provisions to them,preferably with copies of the act,also acording to the commision,it is easily verifiable through a number of relevant European agencies so they have the option of playing ostrich but it will be a financial catastrophe.There is nothing theoretical about the Directive,once again,I stress that before the act came into being as far back as 2004,the European Parliament had actually been announcing that the advent of the directive would give rise to the benefits that member states are playing coy over,The European Parliament advocates this:Marriage certificate,Residence card if applicable and passport,and to call SOLVIT immediately border controls give problems,or in lieu of that make sure that the carriers made a conscious and rational decision to IGNORE or SET ASIDE the provisions then sue them silly,foregone conclusion that you WILL win.