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You can certainly waive your right not to show tickets. Possible that it works. I can't think of anything else in your situation if the ECO is unwilling to understand EEA law.MrsA2009 wrote:My husband is putting in a new application on friday, If I state in the letter that I will travel to morocco first and then we will travel to the Uk together will this make a difference? Although I do not need to show tickets, if I show my tickets to travel to him, along with the letter to state that we will travel together - would that be enough evidence?
Hm, that is an important point. While according to European law you are not required to live together (neither before nor after moving to the UK), it does raise a lot of questions.MrsA2009 wrote:Yes they are aware that we do not live together.
Obviously they haven't insinuated a sham marriage so I suppose you have been married for a while? For how long have you been apart? Can you reasonable justify this in the cover letter?MrsA2009 wrote:Yes they are aware that we do not live together.
Yes, I would think it is a very good idea to put all that down.MrsA2009 wrote: read in another post that intial right of entry, which Im seeking is not subject to condition expect showing of edvience of relationship and evidence of my eea nationality - Should I say in my cover letter that I am aware of this?
will put in the new cover letter that I am aware of my rights. I know that I am not required to be a qualified person until I have been in the UK for more than 3 months.
Should I say in the cover letter that - Article 6 of directive 2994/38/ec does not make the granting of right of entry for family member subject to the fact that the eea national should be exercising treaty rights in the Uk neither does regulation 12 (iaii) state that you have to be exercising treaty rights for the EEA family permit to be issued.
I have been married for 5 months but my husband and I have been together 4 years. If we apply again can they refuse us for a sham marriage even though they didnt the first time?86ti wrote:Obviously they haven't insinuated a sham marriage so I suppose you have been married for a while? For how long have you been apart? Can you reasonable justify this in the cover letter?MrsA2009 wrote:Yes they are aware that we do not live together.
Yes, I would think it is a very good idea to put all that down.MrsA2009 wrote: read in another post that intial right of entry, which Im seeking is not subject to condition expect showing of edvience of relationship and evidence of my eea nationality - Should I say in my cover letter that I am aware of this?
will put in the new cover letter that I am aware of my rights. I know that I am not required to be a qualified person until I have been in the UK for more than 3 months.
Should I say in the cover letter that - Article 6 of directive 2994/38/ec does not make the granting of right of entry for family member subject to the fact that the eea national should be exercising treaty rights in the Uk neither does regulation 12 (iaii) state that you have to be exercising treaty rights for the EEA family permit to be issued.
I do not know but you could be proactive by supplying evidence that you have been together for a longer time. 4 years should more than suffice.MrsA2009 wrote:I have been married for 5 months but my husband and I have been together 4 years. If we apply again can they refuse us for a sham marriage even though they didnt the first time?