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Not sure what you exactly mean here. Why greek authorities?xhesika wrote:We are currently gathering together all the papers required by the greek authorities in order for my husband to apply for a EU family permit WHICH we have been told is for 10 years?>> is this true?
The EEA family permit is a entry clearance for the UK. Why would it entitle you to travel anywhere else? If your husband is legally resident in Greece he must have a proper residence title which should entitle him to travel freely within the Schengen area.xhesika wrote:Does this entitle us to travel to any EU country or must he apply at each and every countries embassy?
EEA route is free of charge, UK route costs money. But eventually it may simply boil down to the question whether your husband wants to obtain UK citizenship. The UK route is faster. Probably also after the changes to the law currently discussed.xhesika wrote:Which route would be best for him to come to UK after our baby is born? EU OR UK LAW?
The Greek authorities i.e Council/visa issuing offices have said this visa that my husband will be applying for will be valid for 10 years, this is an EU permit that will give my husband residence in Greece for ten years on the basis that I am an EU citizen and he is married to me and I have been exercising my treaty rights in Greece..............Apparently!86ti wrote:Not sure what you exactly mean here. Why greek authorities?xhesika wrote:We are currently gathering together all the papers required by the greek authorities in order for my husband to apply for a EU family permit WHICH we have been told is for 10 years?>> is this true?
The UK EEA family permit is valid for six months. After arrival you would apply for a residence card which is valid for up to five years.
The EEA family permit is a entry clearance for the UK. Why would it entitle you to travel anywhere else? If your husband is legally resident in Greece he must have a proper residence title which should entitle him to travel freely within the Schengen area.xhesika wrote:Does this entitle us to travel to any EU country or must he apply at each and every countries embassy?
EEA route is free of charge, UK route costs money. But eventually it may simply boil down to the question whether your husband wants to obtain UK citizenship. The UK route is faster. Probably also after the changes to the law currently discussed.xhesika wrote:Which route would be best for him to come to UK after our baby is born? EU OR UK LAW?
Oh, you were talking about a Greek residence permit. I don't know anything about that. EU law only requires it to be valid for up to 5 years. A residence permit, however, is just a confirmation of rights and in principle it shouldn't be necessary to apply for one, except for obvious practical purposes. After 5 years of continuoulsy exercising your treaty rights he will obtain permanent residence anyway. So it doesn't make sense to me to issue a 10 year's permit.xhesika wrote:The Greek authorities i.e Council/visa issuing offices have said this visa that my husband will be applying for will be valid for 10 years, this is an EU permit that will give my husband residence in Greece for ten years on the basis that I am an EU citizen and he is married to me and I have been exercising my treaty rights in Greece..............Apparently!
I mean if the above is true, CAN my husband travel to any other shengen area with the above residence card/visa?
I'm sorry for your problems and I must tell you that you are not the only one in this similar problem.xhesika wrote:Hi, No I would prefer to stay in UK as I have mentioned that the health system in Greece is not willing to welcome me with open arms without having to pay through the roof and I need regular health care which is not provided on the level that I need, costly or free, it is pointless.
I am now in Uk without my husband and shall be for some time, at least until end of April.
My husband has had to gather so many papers together for the "eu residence" that it has cost us MORE than his usual visa (a 2 year visa, regardless of being married to me) and now the Greek council to whom he has submitted his papers are saying that I must be there for an interview in order for them to grant him eu residence, which is pretty shite as I am now the size of a small house and am not allowed to fly until at least April!
We couldn't care less about my husband gainng citizenship we just want to be together, I know how hard it is without a dad, I don't want my son to go through the same as me.
The government seem hell bent on destroying our life, They have now raised the age limit of a spouse visa to 21 and I am not 21 until August ( yes I am young, but me and hubby have been together for nearly 6 years now and married for nearly 4.......unfortunately not been living in another eu country for 4 consecutive years in order to qualify for the 4 year citizenship rule! which is a huge bum! ) .....................
The point is...it is economically better for us to stay in Greece but they don't cater for my health......my husband earns same money in Greece as UK and has now passed his CAT C licence which will allow him to broaden his choice on work for the whole year.....
In 2008 he earnt €1400 per month for 6 months of the year (€300 a month of that pays for his insurance) and the other 6 months he spent earning €60 per day on average 4days per week AND we rented a house for less than €300 (incl elec+water) per month!
so in theory he earns more than uk and pays out less than uk.
it all seems so cruel to me that some people have to go through this kind of heartbreak, but what can we do except fight it and persevere>? ( it makes it slightly bearable when you get a nice post on here)
a sad and lonely penguin! x
Not really relevant for this case but I just found out that Austria does the same, i.e. issue a first residence permit valid for 10 years.86ti wrote:Oh, you were talking about a Greek residence permit. I don't know anything about that. EU law only requires it to be valid for up to 5 years. A residence permit, however, is just a confirmation of rights and in principle it shouldn't be necessary to apply for one, except for obvious practical purposes. After 5 years of continuoulsy exercising your treaty rights he will obtain permanent residence anyway. So it doesn't make sense to me to issue a 10 year's permit.xhesika wrote:The Greek authorities i.e Council/visa issuing offices have said this visa that my husband will be applying for will be valid for 10 years, this is an EU permit that will give my husband residence in Greece for ten years on the basis that I am an EU citizen and he is married to me and I have been exercising my treaty rights in Greece..............Apparently!
I mean if the above is true, CAN my husband travel to any other shengen area with the above residence card/visa?