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The Directive does apply, of course, and you were correctly admitted to another member state as it says but that does not imply that you can not be required to have a visa.Article 5(2) wrote:Family members who are not nationals of a Member State shall only be required to have an entry visa in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 539/2001 or, where appropriate, with national law. For the purposes of this Directive, possession of the valid residence card referred to in Article 10 shall exempt such family members from the visa requirement.
Why was she not? A journey from member state A to member state B is always under community law unless the EEA national is also a national of B and cannot derive treaty rights (typically from his/her stay in A).MelC wrote:I do agree that entry in this case was under 5(4) not 5(2), but would the portugeuse authoritiies have been within their rights to refuse entry as darkviews wife was NOT travelling under community law but under UK immigration law
That is part of my original question, as the metock ruling more or less means that it does not matter how a person came to be in a member state in the first place, thus, a person in the UK with ILR, that arrived for example as a spouse under UK national immigration law, wishing to go to France, with thier spouse for a holiday, are they looking at Schengen visa type c paid for, or schengen visa type c free under the directive, even though they did not originally enter the UK under the directive, and do not hold a residence card as an EU family member, and it for a holiday but as a visa national they would require a visa to enter france, 5(2), or if they do not obtain the visa can they rely on 5(4) ~ if the EU state does not recognise ILR as being an EU family residience card?86ti wrote:Why was she not? A journey from member state A to member state B is always under community law unless the EEA national is also a national of B and cannot derive treaty rights (typically from his/her stay in A).MelC wrote:I do agree that entry in this case was under 5(4) not 5(2), but would the portugeuse authoritiies have been within their rights to refuse entry as darkviews wife was NOT travelling under community law but under UK immigration law
from your previous post, it says "or, where appropriate, with antional law"Article 5(2) wrote:Family members who are not nationals of a Member State shall only be required to have an entry visa in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 539/2001 or, where appropriate, with national law. For the purposes of this Directive, possession of the valid residence card referred to in Article 10 shall exempt such family members from the visa requirement.
my apologies, i made an incorrect assumption from your post.darkviews wrote:She didn't come to UK with spouses visa, as she was a student here and did enter UK with student visa, then i meet her and we married here. That is why my name IS NOT on here ILR stamp. So she shouln't come under national immigration rules, of spouses. Plus nobody asked us about this neither in Portugal nor in Italy (which we traveled a month before).
Update: Just spoke with 6th lawyer and he said it might come under Public Inquiry or Consumer Rights !!!!! Am i going the right way?
this is the point huh? "legally" and what actually occurs!86ti wrote:Legally they may rely on 5(4) but practically that may turn into an "adventure". Actually, I am quite surprised that it worked out for the OP. An ILR sticker is not a residence card.
IF it were me I would query it with "youreurope" and depending upon what they say, would then take it to solvit, if appropriate.darkviews wrote:She didn't come to UK with spouses visa, as she was a student here and did enter UK with student visa, then i meet her and we married here. That is why my name IS NOT on here ILR stamp. So she shouln't come under national immigration rules, of spouses. Plus nobody asked us about this neither in Portugal nor in Italy (which we traveled a month before).
Update: Just spoke with 6th lawyer and he said it might come under Public Inquiry or Consumer Rights !!!!! Am i going the right way?
Question to Your Europe Advice/Signpost Service wrote:
Enquiry posted on
04/09/2010
Enquiry
79278:
Dear Signpost Service,
The carriers’ liability regime in EU law, which resulted in the introduction of extensive checking facilities belonging to carriers at airports as well as major ports of entry to the EU, occurred with the article 26 of the Schengen Accord. The provision that found its place in the EU asylum acquis after the adoption of the Amsterdam Treaty is as follows:
The carrier shall be obliged to take all necessary measures to ensure that an alien carried by air or sea is in possession of the travel documents required for entry into the territory of the Contracting Parties.
Now, my question is,
As Stupid staff seem completely unaware of the legal rights of EU citizens
and their family. And sometimes wrongly refuse travel to EU families without visa.
Is there any official instructions from the EU commission to the Stupid,
on this issue.
Can you please provide me a link to the instructions or send me the document.
Yours Faithfully
xxx
Reply
Dear xxx,
Thank you for your enquiry.
There are two Directives which attempt to ensure co-ordination in relation to the implementation of Article 26 of the Schengen Convention. These Directives are as follows:
a) Directive 2001/51 which harmonises the financial penalties imposed on carriers transporting into the territories of European Union (EU) countries non-EU nationals lacking the necessary admission documents
b) Directive 2004/82 which requires air carriers to collect and transmit passenger data to the authorities of the Member State of destination responsible for control. Non-compliance may lead to fines being imposed and even, in the case of serious infringement, confiscation of the means of transport or withdrawal of the operating licence.
For further information on free movement of persons in the EU, you may wish to browse the following website where you can also find copies of the Directives referred to above.
I trust that this information is of assistance to you.
Yours sincerely,
Your Europe Advice
Note: To post another enquiry, please visit the Signpost Service Web Site
http://ec.europa.eu/citizensrights/fron ... ost_en.cfm
or contact EUROPE DIRECT.
http://ec.europa.eu/europedirect/
Why would it? EasyJet didn't let you. Is that counter-proof?darkviews wrote:But the fact that we travel at the end, isn't proof enough?
Do they use IATA Timatic, or something else ?darkviews wrote: So i think esayjet issue was to understand IATA's guideline which they refereed to (what they said).
They don't have any training and only refer to IATA when it comes to question mark, and the problem is that, they don't even understand it.
Delta Stupid allow customers access to Timatic.IATA Timatic is the industry standard used by Stupid and travel
agents to be compliant with border control rules and regulations.
Timatic delivers personalized information based on the passengers
destination, transit points, nationality, travel document, residence
country etc.
The Timatic Quick Reference Guide will assist you to make the correct
request for the specific information of every type of passenger.
Timatic can be used to provide passengers with this critical
information as part of the booking process, as well as during check-in
to ensure travelers have the correct travel documentation.
by the way, for the Croatian child, that easyjet refused,Timatic wrote: / 18OCT10 / 2310 UTC
National Iran (Islamic Republic of) (IR)
Residence United Kingdom (Great Britain) (GB)
Destination Portugal (PT)
Portugal (PT)
Passport required.
- Passport and/or passport replacing documents must be valid
on arrival.
Visa required, except for Those, irrespective of nationality,
for a max. stay of 90 days, holding "family member" residence
permit issued by United Kingdom (Great Britain) to a family
member of an EEA national TIRGL/EEA or national of
Switzerland, provided travelling with or travelling to join
the EEA national or national of Switzerland.
Minors:
- Travel between Portugal and other Schengen Member States
TIRGL/SCHN For details, click here
- Foreign minors under 18 years of age
For details, click here
- Pupils For details, click here
Additional Information:
- Valid visas in full or expired passports or travel documents
are accepted, provided accompanied by the new passport or
travel document issued by the same authority.
- Visitors must have funds of at least EUR 74.82 plus EUR
39.90 per day for stay For details, click here
- This country is a Schengen Member State
Warning:
- Non-compliance with entry/transit requirements (including
forged documents) results in fines for transporting carrier
For details, click here
CHECK TINEWS/N1 - SOUTH AFRICA - TRANSIT VISA REQUIREMENT -
UPDATED INFORMATION
Timaticweb Version 1.3
18 October 2010
I am not convinced, although I see the logic, that persons holding ILR are covered by the Directive ~Obie wrote:I believe some of the posters would have mentioned already, that in any litigation, the Stupid will use Article 5(2) as their defence. Article 5(4) says before you are sent back at the border, the Immigration Officer should certify him/herself that you are not a family member as you claimed.
1. Firstly your wife is required to have obtained visa.
2. If she manage to get to the destination country without a visa, she cannot be automatically sent back, except if they cannot confirm she is a family member as claimed.
3. Article 5 (4) does not mean your spouse is entitled to travel without a visa.
Had she been in possession of a residence card of a family member who exercise a treaty rights in another memberstate, then that would be a different matter
The Timatic thing really really remind me of little Britain Computer says NOMelC wrote: the timatic system does not seem to allow for Accompaning/joining spouses of EU citizens which would obviously help in such cases?
[url=http://www.travbuddy.com/Visa-Information-Authoritative-and-Free-v5225]travbuddy[/url] wrote: On the other hand, airline check-in agents rely on TIMATIC to decide whether to accept you for a flight (in terms of visa considerations). So, if the embassy tells you that you don't need a visa ... be prepared to miss your flight if TIMATIC says that you do!!
Finally, carry a printout of the TIMATIC visa requirements ... it once saved my day when questioned by the authorities!
Exactly, even Portuguese embassy said they will give her schengen visa for free but it takes two weeks (which we didn't have)MelC wrote:
so as far as this system is concerned, and as this is what Stupid would be looking at ~ ILR would mean a payable schengen visa.
Once again, ILR is not a residence card under EU law! Only a residence card documents ones right under the Directive and permits visa free travel provided that the family member travels with or joins the EEA national they derive their rights from (the relevant articles from the directive have been given and explained in this thread). The IATA database is wrong in calling it a 'residence permit'.darkviews wrote:They couldn't translate her ILR to family member resident permit
I get that feeling on another forum!86ti wrote:Once again, ILR is not a residence card under EU law! Only a residence card documents ones right under the Directive and permits visa free travel provided that the family member travels with or joins the EEA national they derive their rights from (the relevant articles from the directive have been given and explained in this thread). The IATA database is wrong in calling it a 'residence permit'.darkviews wrote:They couldn't translate her ILR to family member resident permit
BTW, you guys are not the first here who mix those things up (has been discussed a dozen of times before). Understandable given that even the authorities of the member states can't get it right. And, eventually EU and national regulations are the law and not 'random' entries in a database of an industry body or the current practices of border guards, embassy staff, etc.
I won't comment in this thread anymore as it seems pointless to repeat myself over and over again.