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Possible, yes. Read through the guidance, first link and check for 'extended family members' for the conditions that must be met.oflondon wrote:Please i would like to know if it is possible for an extended family member ( brother ) of a non-eea family member of an eea citizen apply for EEA FAMILY PERMIT abroad. Thanks
How kind! Nice to "see" you tooJA13I wrote:Sorry to go off-topic, but Amanda, great to have you back. Its been years!
I have no idea what your brother's circumstances are, so I can't tell what catagory you fall into.oflondon wrote:@ avjones...... many thanks for your reply. Please which one of those conditions do you think would best suit my non-eea brother in other to apply for the EEA family permit.Thanks
Very simple. Read the links that various people have sent you. Think about your family situation with respect to your brother.oflondon wrote:Please advice
The regulations still say that? Directive 2004/38/EC does not say "living in anothe EEA state". That extra "living in another EEA state" is likely something which could be fought on the basis of recent ECJ decisions.avjones wrote:the regulations say "living in another EEA state", which Nigeria isn't.
oflondon wrote:i've checked the link.Thanks......that means my brother is eligible for EEA family permit. We lived in the same household before coming to the U.K. At the moment, he is financially dependent on me and my EEA spouse ( studying )although he lives in Nigeria but we want him to come over to the U.K . My EEA wife and I work full-time here in U.K and she ( My EEA Spouse ) is ready to sponsor him.
Can he go ahead and apply for EEA family permit in Nigeria? Please advice. Thanks
Yes, but it would be long and complicated.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:The regulations still say that? Directive 2004/38/EC does not say "living in anothe EEA state". That extra "living in another EEA state" is likely something which could be fought on the basis of recent ECJ decisions.avjones wrote:the regulations say "living in another EEA state", which Nigeria isn't.
Why is this? Is there anything preventing somebody introducing ECJ rulings as part of an appeal to the First-tier Immigration Tribunal?avjones wrote:Yes, but it would be long and complicated.