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Are you just Irish + Russian, or do you also have Italian citizenship?notrouble wrote:I am an Irish citizen and live/work in Italy. My 18 year old sister is a non-EU national (Russian) and lives with me in Italy. She is recognised by the Italian government as my dependent and she has a permission to remain as a family member of an EU/Italian citizen. However, her card was issued only for 2 years (unlike some other Italian residency permits for the direct relatives of EU citizens that are issued generally for 5 years).
She has an Italian Residence Card so she should be able to enter Ireland without a visa. Maybe you should fly to Ireland for a day on Ryanair to see that works fine...notrouble wrote:1) Will I need to apply for an Irish visa for her now that I will have to return to Ireland? Or will she be able to go to Ireland visa-free as a member of my household in Italy under the EU Directive 2004/38/EC (since I am an Irish citizen who is currently excercising his EU rights in another EU State and returning to Ireland)? I have attempted emailing the Irish Embassy in Rome, but have not heard back from them...
not sure. Check the law. http://eumovement.wordpress.com/eu-coun ... o-ireland/notrouble wrote:2) When in Ireland, will my sister be recognised under the EU Directive 2004/38/EC as my dependent? My understanding is that she be able to apply for a residency card in Ireland since I am an Irish citizen returning from another EU State?
Hopefully but depends on whether DOJ fights. If she was your spouse it would be straight forward.notrouble wrote:3) I will most likely be moving to Spain after about 8 months in Ireland (for work again). Will we be able to complete all formalities within that timeframe?
Just like right now, you can leave your host member state for up to 6 months without affecting your (the EU citizen) residence. If you leave for longer than that then you loose your Irish residence, and so will your sister.notrouble wrote:4) Will my sister be able to stay in Ireland in case I have to go to Spain? She will be starting her college studies from next year, and I assume that she will qualify to pay EU fees in Ireland (similar to Italy) should she go to a college in Ireland?
I'm Irish/Russian only and do not have the Italian nationality.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Are you just Irish + Russian, or do you also have Italian citizenship?notrouble wrote:I am an Irish citizen and live/work in Italy. My 18 year old sister is a non-EU national (Russian) and lives with me in Italy. She is recognised by the Italian government as my dependent and she has a permission to remain as a family member of an EU/Italian citizen. However, her card was issued only for 2 years (unlike some other Italian residency permits for the direct relatives of EU citizens that are issued generally for 5 years).
I believe it is a common practice here in Italy to issue these cards valid for 2 years to non-direct relatives of Italian/EU nationals (non-direct here in Italy means up to the second grade, basically one's brothers/sisters) who reside at the same address as the Italian/EU national. Her current Italian residence card will expire in about 20 months.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote: Why was she only given two years? When does that expire?
notrouble wrote:2) When in Ireland, will my sister be recognised under the EU Directive 2004/38/EC as my dependent? My understanding is that she be able to apply for a residency card in Ireland since I am an Irish citizen returning from another EU State?
not sure. Check the law. http://eumovement.wordpress.com/eu-coun ... o-ireland/
Why would you say that?86ti wrote:As long as the sister qualifies as a beneficiary that should not matter. Simple argument: the sister must be assessed in the very same way as the sister of any other EEA national who wishes to relocate to Ireland.
This is obviously primarily my personal opinion how free movement should work. EEA law allows beneficiaries to benefit from this law provided that certain conditions are satisfied, essentially that 'true' family links exist. The reason why beneficiaries have been included in the first place is that having to leave such family members behind could mean obviously that the EEA national is effectively prevented from making use of his/her free movement rights. An EEA national returning to his/her country of nationality is still a matter of free movement. If that is so, why would only direct family members be able to benefit from EEA regulations but suddenly extended family members not anymore?Ben wrote:Why would you say that?86ti wrote:As long as the sister qualifies as a beneficiary that should not matter. Simple argument: the sister must be assessed in the very same way as the sister of any other EEA national who wishes to relocate to Ireland.
Quoting Article 3 here is actually quite misleading because that's the very same article that deals with extended family members.notrouble wrote:Q.8 I am an Irish National. Can my non EEA family members apply for EU Treaty Rights?
A The Directive applies to all Union citizens who move to or reside in a Member State other than that of which they are a national, and to their family members who accompany or join them. (Article 3 of Directive 2004/38/EC)
I do see your point. Also, I do wonder why "spouse" in the Singh ruling seems to have been voluntarily extended to "family members" by member states, but not to "beneficiaries".86ti wrote:This is obviously primarily my personal opinion how free movement should work. EEA law allows beneficiaries to benefit from this law provided that certain conditions are satisfied, essentially that 'true' family links exist. The reason why beneficiaries have been included in the first place is that having to leave such family members behind could mean obviously that the EEA national is effectively prevented from making use of his/her free movement rights. An EEA national returning to his/her country of nationality is still a matter of free movement. If that is so, why would only direct family members be able to benefit from EEA regulations but suddenly extended family members not anymore?Ben wrote:Why would you say that?86ti wrote:As long as the sister qualifies as a beneficiary that should not matter. Simple argument: the sister must be assessed in the very same way as the sister of any other EEA national who wishes to relocate to Ireland.
The DoJ made a mistake there. They should have written Article 2, not 3.86ti wrote:Quoting Article 3 here is actually quite misleading because that's the very same article that deals with extended family members.notrouble wrote:Q.8 I am an Irish National. Can my non EEA family members apply for EU Treaty Rights?
A The Directive applies to all Union citizens who move to or reside in a Member State other than that of which they are a national, and to their family members who accompany or join them. (Article 3 of Directive 2004/38/EC)
Eind uses 'family member'. Not sure if it s defined somewhere there but in principle also beneficiary are treated as a family members after having passed 'the checks' (Obie's argument).Ben wrote:Certainly the UK and Ireland are extending Singh provisions to family members. I believe this extension is EU-wide. I find it hard to believe that they're actually doing this voluntarily. Perhaps there was a subsequent ruling to Singh that I'm not aware of, that dealt with family members and not solely spouses?
I think they are referring there to 3(1).Ben wrote:The DoJ made a mistake there. They should have written Article 2, not 3.86ti wrote:Quoting Article 3 here is actually quite misleading because that's the very same article that deals with extended family members.notrouble wrote:Q.8 I am an Irish National. Can my non EEA family members apply for EU Treaty Rights?
A The Directive applies to all Union citizens who move to or reside in a Member State other than that of which they are a national, and to their family members who accompany or join them. (Article 3 of Directive 2004/38/EC)
Exactly, which means Singh and it's conditions are not relied upon.notrouble wrote:Ben, I hear you, but I have heard of some other cases where brothers/ sisters were able to join their EU national relatives in Ireland. One example is your brother-in-law... I do note however that you are of British nationality.
Your are entitled to benefit from the provisions of applicable ECJ rulings.notrouble wrote:On the other hand, I do not see why the Irish government would treat me differently to another EU national when I am returning to Ireland from another EU state.
Ireland's transposition of Directive 2004/38/EC is the European Communities (Free Movement of Persons) (No. 2) Regulations 2006. "Family members" are transposed as "qualifying family members" and "beneficiaries" are transposed as "permitted family members". Interestingly, since the latter includes the word "family member", that in itself may help your sister, should she make an application.notrouble wrote:Furthermore, I could not find a definition of family members on the INIS's website, am I correct to assume it is generic as per the EU Directive, or is there another definition?
Indeed, but the form is primarily for when the EU national is not an Irish national and thus subject to more restrictions.notrouble wrote:Also, the EU1 form on the INIS's website (http://www.inis.gov.ie/en/INIS/Form%20E ... eaflet.pdf) lists the range of family members and how to prove the relationship. On page 3, it reads:
(b) Evidence of relationship with the EU citizen
then they go on listing children, spouses, parents, and then they have another paragraph:
For other family members:
•Satisfactory evidence of relationship with the EU citizen
•Evidence of dependency on the EU citizen, including dependency prior to residing in the State OR evidence of membership of the EU citizen's household OR medical evidence, including a medical report from a physician, hospital etc., that you require the personal care of the EU citizen for health reasons
I have checked the document that you mentioned (European Communities (Free Movement of Persons) (No. 2) Regulations 2006.).Ben wrote: "Family members" are transposed as "qualifying family members" and "beneficiaries" are transposed as "permitted family members".
I have checked the document that you mentioned (European Communities (Free Movement of Persons) (No. 2) Regulations 2006.).notrouble wrote:Ben wrote: "Family members" are transposed as "qualifying family members" and "beneficiaries" are transposed as "permitted family members".