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Can you give details of why that was the case?Once that expired my family applied for Indefinite leave to remain. However, we got another 5 years which expires in 2014 March.
We really don't know why that happened, they just sent us the passport with another 5 years.John wrote:I fear you are confusing ILR and PR, which is the EEA-route equivalent of ILR. I am moving this topic to the EEA-route area of this board.
Can you give details of why that was the case?Once that expired my family applied for Indefinite leave to remain. However, we got another 5 years which expires in 2014 March.
My dad has been in the UK since 1995. He worked till 2003, since then he cannot work because he is highly diabetic person.John wrote:No, not now, not ever! Is that clear enough?can I get ILR ?
What you might be able to apply for is PR, Permanent Residence.
Your Dad, Portuguese, how long has he been in the UK? And what does he do in the UK? For example, employed? Self-employed? Or what?
Firstly, Thanks John and Directive/2004/38/ECDirective/2004/38/EC wrote:You came in 2002. Your dad was working until 2003 and then has been sick (but would retain his residence rights in any case).
So I think you should have had PR in 2007. Do you know exactly what you applied for in 2007? Was it a Permanent Residence Card using form EEA4? Or was a Residence Card renewal using form EEA2?
In any case, you very likely already have PR since 2007. And so in 2008 you would have been able to apply for citizenship.
Note that ILR is the name of the right if you are not a family member of a European. PR is what it is called if you are a family member of a European.
Directive/2004/38/EC, can I ask your opinion on this? I notice that Article 7.3(a) of the Directive includes the word "temporary", as in :-Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:You came in 2002. Your dad was working until 2003 and then has been sick (but would retain his residence rights in any case).
Do you consider that a problem? After all 2003 is now 8 years ago.he/she is temporarily unable to work as the result of an illness or accident
The father had been in the UK (and presumably working) from 1995 until 2003, which is about 8 year.John wrote:Directive/2004/38/EC, can I ask your opinion on this? I notice that Article 7.3(a) of the Directive includes the word "temporary", as in :-Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:You came in 2002. Your dad was working until 2003 and then has been sick (but would retain his residence rights in any case).
Do you consider that a problem? After all 2003 is now 8 years ago.he/she is temporarily unable to work as the result of an illness or accident
Do check the documents and the letter and let us know. What exactly does it say on your passport Residence Card vignette?Swadesh wrote:We applied for Permanent Residence Card, but I was very young at that time so don't know which form my dad filled in.
Yh, I should have got the citizenship, but we do not know why. Now, My Main Question Is: I want to know if I can still get "PR" with the current laws. or We will get a temporary one again, ie. 5 years or 10 years.
I will check the documents again and the final letter they sent us. And thanks for explaining the ILR and PR.
Hello, Here is the residence card which I have scanned from the passport. I have removed the personal details but rest is all there.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Do check the documents and the letter and let us know. What exactly does it say on your passport Residence Card vignette?Swadesh wrote:We applied for Permanent Residence Card, but I was very young at that time so don't know which form my dad filled in.
Yh, I should have got the citizenship, but we do not know why. Now, My Main Question Is: I want to know if I can still get "PR" with the current laws. or We will get a temporary one again, ie. 5 years or 10 years.
I will check the documents again and the final letter they sent us. And thanks for explaining the ILR and PR.
The way PR works is you either have it or you do not. It sounds very much like you have it. The only way to loose it if you do have it is to move away from the UK for more than 2 years.
If you have it, you can immediately apply for British citizenship if you want. You do not even need to get a PR card before doing the application.
I have no idea about which form it was... and @ that time I was just 16 and had no clues on legal documents.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Do you have a copy of the application for that was sent in 2009 for you? What is the name of the UKBA form used for the application?
Hello, which form would I require for Permanent Residence and do I have to give Life in the UK test for this?Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:I did see them. And you definitely have a Residence Card.
I am wondering if you have that because that is what you applied for, which I suspect is the case. Did your parents keep a copy of the form when they submitted it?
In any case, I think you already have PR. You can apply for a PR card if you want.
Or you can just apply for your British citizenship directly.
I would tend personally to apply for the PR card first, since that is free and it clears the air of that issue. If you get it, then apply for citizenship right away, which is an expensive application. In the mean time you can jump through the "life in the UK" hoops...
I would also suggest you get your SAR from UKBA. http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/navig ... onal-data/ That will give you some of the history from when you were smaller.
Thanks, Directive/2004/38/EC and John For All The Explanations Above.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Sorry I should not have confused things together.
To apply for a PR card you would use form EEA4. See http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/eucit ... /applying/
"Life in the UK" is ONLY needed if you in the future decide to apply for British citizenship.
Please can you explain this to me?Swadesh wrote:as soon as I get my mothers and fathers passport from the Student Finance Department
they are assessing the student's eligibility for funding/home fees and therefore may need the parent's passports and other evidence of their financial circumstances.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:They were not happy with your Residence Card alone? And they needed both your parent's passports? Wow!
Is there a link to their documents policy on their web site?
The parent's passport only proves the parent's identity and citizenship - nothing more. And that is in no way relevant for funding/home fees.Greenie wrote:they are assessing the student's eligibility for funding/home fees and therefore may need the parent's passports and other evidence of their financial circumstances.