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till decree nisi or decree obsoluteaskmeplz82 wrote:decree finalised
YES 10 yrs legal resident but you still need to provide EEA NATIONAL exercise treaty right from your marriage date or the date your old visa expired UP UNTIL 10 yrs completeMiracle need wrote:Thanks askmeplz and other readers.
I am uk graduate with university degrees and life in uk test passed.
I only need few months which are almost same as the divorce finalization time to complete 10 years legal residence for indefinite leave and since married with EU national (2 years) i am paying private medical insurance till today covering both of us and i have all previous banks statements to show self sufficiency but about upcoming months bank statements i may not get or maybe get few online bank statement version.
Question:
Do you think that divorce time till getting decree obsolete will be counted in 10 years because i will still be the family member of EU national?
As per my little knowledge ; apart of EEA2 application where recent treaty rights evidence requires but for other EU related applications i think 6 months treaty rights & residence per year should be suffice because EU national can be absent for six months each years and caseworker not care about absence as long as the 6 months of that particular year backed by 6 months treaty rights.Miracle need wrote:Moreover, is that correct that caseworker normally check 6 months treaty rights evidence of EU national per year or he follow entire year evidences.
Miracle need wrote:
But i still cannot find any regulation which says that non-eu partner even after separation till divorce obsolute is deemed as family member of EU national. can anybody give me link of that regulation please.
https://tribunalsdecisions.service.gov. ... 11126-20132. On 12 January 2013 the appellant applied for a permanent residence card as confirmation of a right to reside in the United Kingdom. She would be entitled to such a card, in accordance with Regulation 15(1)(b) of the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006 if she could establish that she had been "a family member of an EEA national? who has resided in the United Kingdom with [that] EEA national in accordance with these Regulations for a continuous period of five years". Although by this time, the appellant and her husband had apparently separated, it is not now in dispute that at the time of this application, he was in the UK and the parties, although separated, had not finalised a divorce. Accordingly, if the appellant could show that there was a five year continuous period in which she had been living with her husband while he had been living in this country (in accordance with these Regulations) she would have acquired a right of permanent residence and thus would be entitled to a permanent residence card as confirmation of her right to reside in this country.