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You need to apply for a residence permit. He will have to take and pass the Civic Integration exam before being able to move to NL - does he speak any Dutch?stephany wrote:I have dutch citizenship together with my daughter, im living out of the country (jordan) after the birth of my daughter i got sick with post-natal depression which developed into bipolar disorder. I decided I want to go back to my country, Holland, it's too difficult here, the problem is i don't want to go alone, i want my husband to come with me, of course. My hubby has Jordanian nationality, my question is: can we go to Holland together? since, I need my husband there to take care of me, incase my bipolar gets high.
I believe the civic exam abroad has been outlawedsakura wrote:
You need to apply for a residence permit. He will have to take and pass the Civic Integration exam before being able to move to NL - does he speak any Dutch?
You will need a medical certificateto prove you are unable to work and fulfill the minimum income requirements.
Interesting.republique wrote:I believe the civic exam abroad has been outlawedsakura wrote:
You need to apply for a residence permit. He will have to take and pass the Civic Integration exam before being able to move to NL - does he speak any Dutch?
You will need a medical certificateto prove you are unable to work and fulfill the minimum income requirements.
See http://www.expatica.com/nl/life_in/feat ... broad.html
The minimum wage requirement of 120% is also being removed as well See http://www.expatica.com/nl/articles/new ... -laws.html
However overall, I don't think you will fare well in getting him over, the dutch system is about money, if you don't have any because you don't work so they won't be too impressed or in a hurry to approve you. Expect a serious uphill battle.
...and I cannot imagine the Dutch government deciding not to appeal on this issue.The Dutch justice ministry is not happy with the Amsterdam court's ruling and is considering an appeal, which would have to be lodged within four weeks. If the case does go to appeal, the Amsterdam ruling will be suspended and citizenship tests abroad will, for the time being, carry on as before. Even if the court's decision that there is no legal basis for the tests were to stand, parliament could decide to change the law to provide the required legal basis.
How rude. Do not post if you plan on deleting it after you got your answer.stephany wrote:none
Nice one, Republique!republique wrote:How rude. Do not post if you plan on deleting it after you got your answer.stephany wrote:none
Lucky for us, someone already quoted you before you sneaked back in and deleted it.