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Wow....this is a good news, Yes its good Switzerland don't accept Residence card as family from UK and Ireland as visa-free....good to knowarchigabe wrote:Switzerland joins Schengen
http://www.bfm.admin.ch/bfm/en/home/the ... reise.html
Switzerland is now a part of Schengen, third country nationals with residence permits of Ireland and the U.K will now have to apply for visas for entry into Switzerland...unfortunately, this is a step backward for EEA and Stamp4EU fam residence card holders of U.K and Ireland.
First of all, I fully agree with Axez that UK and Ireland are to blame for staying outside Schengen, and any travel restriction that is a consequence of that!archigabe wrote:Switzerland joins Schengen
http://www.bfm.admin.ch/bfm/en/home/the ... reise.html
Switzerland is now a part of Schengen, third country nationals with residence permits of Ireland and the U.K will now have to apply for visas for entry into Switzerland...unfortunately, this is a step backward for EEA and Stamp4EU fam residence card holders of U.K and Ireland.
From a practical point of view you are right but remember that some EU countries have largely ignored Article 5 of the directive and considered anyone with the RC alone to be illegal. At least that's what some embassies said and we had reports here that people have even been deported. I hope the Swiss will be more pragmatic.fysicus wrote:Anyway, holders of a Residence Card issued according to directive 2004/38 should enjoy the same visa-free travel to Switzerland as to all other Schengen countries. Because there are no (systematic) border checks between Schengen countries there is simply no other possibility, even though Switzerland is not an EU or EEA member state.
UK residence cards are not accepted on their own for entry into Switzerland anymore. Family members in possession of a UK RC need to apply for a Swiss Schengen visa. Good news? It is FREE!Richard66 wrote:Are we sure UK residence cards will not be accepted? Even before Swizerland joined Schengen residence cards issued bu every single EU and EEA country was valid as a short stay visa. I fail to understand why joining Schengen changes this.
Doubt that you would get any embassy to issue you with a schengen visa so close to the expiry of your passport. The best way to find out about the Swiss is to call the premium rate number: 0906 577 1222 (answered by a member of staff at the Swiss Visa Centre), from Monday to Friday between 08.30 h to 20.00 h or via the following email address: visaswiss.uk@vfshelpline.comJG wrote:The problem I have is that you need 3 months left on your UK visa to get a schengen visa - mine expires 2 months after my trip to Sitzerland in January therefore I cannot get aschengen visa - and I booked a paid for my trip 6 months ago. From what I can gather there is nothing I can do - any suggestions ?
answer from: Legal Advisor Schengen / DublinI am an EU national exercising Treaty Rights in the UK, and my wife has Ukrainian nationality. We live here together (of course) and she has in her passport a Residence Card, issued according to EU directive 2004/38, which exempts her from the visa requirement for all EU member states (according to article 5.2 of this directive). And in fact she also travelled to Switzerland on a business trip about a year-and-a-half ago without visa and was admitted on the strength of this Residence Card without any problems.
However, now that Switzerland has recently joined the Schengen area, it seems (from the FAQ page on the VF Services (UK) Limited website, to which you refer on your embassy website) she would in the future need to apply for a visa to enter Switzerland, even though she still enjoys visa-free travel to all other Schengen states??
http://ch.vfsglobal.co.uk/faq.aspx
As Switzerland is not member of the European Union the mentioned EU directive 2004/38 does not apply to Switzerland. Therefore the Visa exemption for a third state national is not valid for Switzerland either. Furthermore, the UK is not part of the Schengen Agreement and with Switzerland joining the Schengen Area the policy towards third state members with resident permit in the UK has also changed. Persons who hold a resident permit for family members of EU nationals are required to obtain a visa. Your wife will therefore need a visa in order to enter Switzerland.
Has your wife been able to travel (accompanied or solo) to France, Spain, Belgium... without applying for a Schengen visa and without any complications on entry at the borders?However, now that Switzerland has recently joined the Schengen area, it seems (from the FAQ page on the VF Services (UK) Limited website, to which you refer on your embassy website) she would in the future need to apply for a visa to enter Switzerland,??even though she still enjoys visa-free travel to all other Schengen states
I think that the response you got makes perfect sense. If Switzerland were wholly part of the EU then the UK Residence card should (in practice) allow non-EEA Family members visa free access to such countries. As it stands the bilateral agreements they have with the EU (& the UK) seem insufficient to bind them absolutely to the EU Directive.As Switzerland is not member of the European Union the mentioned EU directive 2004/38 does not apply to Switzerland. Therefore the Visa exemption for a third state national is not valid for Switzerland either. Furthermore, the UK is not part of the Schengen Agreement and with Switzerland joining the Schengen Area the policy towards third state members with resident permit in the UK has also changed. Persons who hold a resident permit for family members of EU nationals are required to obtain a visa. Your wife will therefore need a visa in order to enter Switzerland.
Yes, quite a few times when we travelled together and on one occasion even on solo travel (destination Austria, but entering Schengen via Schiphol-Amsterdam Airport).Has your wife been able to travel (accompanied or solo) to France, Spain, Belgium... without applying for a Schengen visa and without any complications on entry at the borders?
I don't agree; it does not make sense except perhaps for a lawyer out of touch with reality. I can accept that they have no legal obligation to accept UK-issued residence cards (not being a member of the EU), but the combination of joining Schengen and at the same time making travel more difficult for some EU-residents is not logical!I think that the response you got makes perfect sense.
so they are breaking the law...France and Belgium are part of the EU and still require that non-EEA family members apply for a (free) schengen visa before travel
Again, Switzerland is not part of the EU and therefore (by their interpretation) have no legal duty to allow freedom of movement to non-EEA/EU family members residing in a non-schengen state (in this case the UK).I don't agree; it does not make sense except perhaps for a lawyer out of touch with reality. I can accept that they have no legal obligation to accept UK-issued residence cards (not being a member of the EU), but the combination of joining Schengen and at the same time making travel more difficult for some EU-residents is not logical!I think that the response you got makes perfect sense.
Oh Yesso they are breaking the law...France and Belgium are part of the EU and still require that non-EEA family members apply for a (free) schengen visa before travel
---------- Translated message ----------
From: Christian
Date: 9/March/2009
Subject: Visa for family-members of EFTA / EU citizens
To: dub.vertretung@eda.admin.ch, info@eda.admin.ch
Dear Swiss embassy Dublin,
Dear Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
I am an EU citizen and until recently lived in Dublin. As I'm married to a
Lebanese citizen I have been interested in EU and Schengen Visa
regulations for a while now.
Until Switzerland joined the Schengen-Area Irish "resident cards for
family members of EU-citizens" (in Ireland called "4EUFam") were
accepted for entry into Switzerland.
Since Switzerland joined the Schengen-Area , these 4EUFam-Cards are
no longer accepted by Switzerland.
This is, especially because of the now open land-borders, illogical:
Directive 2004/38/EC allows entry into all of the EU with a 4EUFam card.
Hence, family-members of EU citizens can now enter all countries
surrounding CH/FL, but may not enter CH/FL * itself.
It would be nice to hear your point of view on this.
Rgds, Christian
---------- Original message ----------
From: Christian
Date: 9/March/2009
Subject: Visa für Familienangehörige von EFTA / EU Staatsangehörigen
To: dub.vertretung@eda.admin.ch, info@eda.admin.ch
Sehr geehrte schweizerische Botschaft in Dublin,
Sehr geehrtes Departement für auswärtige Angelegenheiten,
ich bin EU Bürger und wohnte bis vor kurzem in Dublin. Mit einer
libanesischen Staatsangehörigen verheiratet interessiere ich mich seit
geraumer Zeit für Visaregeln innerhalb der EU und innerhalb Schengens.
Bis zum Beitritt der Schweiz zum Schengen-Raum wurden irische
"Aufenthaltskarten für Familienangehörige von EU-Bürgern" (in Irland
"4EUFam" genannt) zur Einreise in die Schweiz anerkannt.
Seit dem Beitritt der Schweiz zum Schengen-Raum werden
4EUFam-Karten in der Schweiz nicht mehr anerkannt.
Dies ist, insbesondere aufgrund der nun offenen Land-grenzen, unlogisch:
Die 4EUFam-Karte erlaubt nach Richtlinie 2004/38/EC die Einreise in
die gesamte EU. Somit dürfen Familienangehörige von EU-Bürgern mit
der 4EUFam-Karte nun in alle Nachbarländer der Schweiz und
Liechtensteins einreien, nur in die Schweiz/FL * nicht mehr.
Es wäre nett eine Erläuterung Ihrer Sichtweise zu erhalten.
Gruss, Christian
Actually, EU should read EEA instead here and FL should be covered directly by the directive, see http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/Lex ... 01:EN:HTMLca.funke wrote:Directive 2004/38/EC allows entry into all of the EU with a 4EUFam card.
Hence, family-members of EU citizens can now enter all countries
surrounding CH/FL, but may not enter CH/FL itself.
It is maybe legal. The Swiss probably just replaced their old regulations with the Schengen rules. I suppose EEA-family members just don't appear anymore as the free movement agreement between Switzerland and the EU doesn't make mention of it. EEA-family members were not an exception in the old rules but simply part of a whole package allowing most(?) residents of the UK to come to Switzerland.ca.funke wrote:The fact that Switzerland no longer accepts UK and Irish residence-cards of EU or EEA-family members may be legally OK(?)
In this case 4EUFam would be valid throughout the EU, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Iceland?(...) the EEA Joint Committee (...) HAS DECIDED AS FOLLOWS:
Article 1
(...)Directive 2004/38/EC (...) shall, for the purposes of the Agreement, be read with the following adaptations:
(...)
(c) The words "Union citizen(s)" shall be replaced by the words "national(s) of EC Member States and EFTA States".
(...)
...as this suggests that family members need a visa, although they don't?Visa handling fee
The visa handling fee in general is EUR 60.00. It is due upon application and is not refundable. The visa fee is payable in cash.
If you are married to an EU/EFTA citizen or one or both of your parents are EU/EFTA citizens, the visa is free of charge. Please provide the Embassy also with your marriage- or birth certificate and your spouse's passport or your parent(s) passport(s) as proof.
If you wish to have your passport returned to you by post you must supply the Embassy with a self-addressed registered envelope.