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Thank you Lucapooka. What's the difference between EEA1, EEA2 family permits? are there any other types of family permits? I need to know which one would apply for me.Lucapooka wrote:There are no age limits. It's for family members from the time they are born and upwards.
Oh right thank you!Lucapooka wrote:EEA Family permita are exclusively for people outside the UK who wish to enter the UK. EEA Registration certificates and Residence cards are for EEA nationals and their non-EEA family members (respectively) who are inside the UK and wish to apply for confirmation of their permission to reside there.
Thank you now I understandLucapooka wrote:If you husband is British (and has no other EEA nationality) and is not currently living with you in another EEA State (other than the UK) then you are not eligible to follow the EEA rules for living in the UK. You would have to follow the UK immigration rules.
I will be applying for university next month. But I won't be starting until the new year. Also, I was in a car accident and I will be going for an MRI scan here in Ireland whenever I get my appointment letter. Would a university application for 2012 or hospital appointment letter be sufficient enough? Also, I have an application for Irish citizenship being processed. Is that a strong tie?Lucapooka wrote:With regard to family ties, parents and siblings are alone not sufficient now that you have a husband that is living in the UK. Your intention to leave the UK after any visit will be compromised by the residence there of a husband who does not intend to leave the UK to live with you in Ireland. Your strong ties will include any reason that keeps you in Ireland and prevents you from settling in the UK with your partner. That could be work or study that demands you be in Ireland, or some other family commitment that means you have to remain there. Anything that will motivate your return rather than simply staying in the UK with your husband.
How long would he have to work in Ireland? And what is the Surinder Singh ruling?Lucapooka wrote:I can't say with certainty. These decisions can be very arbitrary. If your husband in not currently working why doesn't he go to Ireland for a period and exercise a treaty right, and then you can apply to enter and remain in the UK under the Surindar Singh ruling.
Thank you for your helpLucapooka wrote:You can google ECJ Surindar Singh for more detailed information. It's aECJ ruling that allows British citizens to bring their non-EEA partners to the UK under EEA immigration rules (rather than UK rules) if they have lived and exercised treaty rights in another EEA state immediately before they return to the UK. The actual time-frame in not tangible but six months should be more than sufficient.
Lucapooka wrote:With regard to family ties, parents and siblings alone are not sufficient now that you have a husband that is living in the UK. Your intention to leave the UK after any visit will be compromised by the residence there of a husband who does not intend to leave the UK to live with you in Ireland. Your strong ties will include any reason that keeps you in Ireland and prevents you from settling in the UK with your partner. That could be work or study that demands you be in Ireland, or some other family commitment that means you have to remain there. Anything that will motivate your return rather than simply staying in the UK with your husband.
No because I got my visa in March, it was a tourist visa and I said I was going to visit some friends and that I will be staying at my husband's place (he wasn't my husband then!) .. but then few months went buy, we went on a summer holiday together outside UK, and then he proposed n wanted to get married.. my UK visa was still valid at the time, so we went bk to UK and decided to get married and we got married in August a month before my permission expired.. I never planned for it before I applied for visa. Anways, I was on a tourist visa and the new law about the certificate of approval being abolished was abolished in April, so before I got married, I didn't even know about it.sushdmehta wrote:Because you did not overstay during your last visit last time (or during other visits in the past) doesn't necessarily mean that you may not / cannot / will not overstay the next time (or during any future visits).
Now that you are married to a person who is a British national resident in the UK, the onus is on you to convince the ECO that you will return to Ireland and not remain in the UK (with your husband) beyond the duration of your visit visa.
Do you have a job to go back to?
Are you currently studying in Ireland?
So, how will a ECO be convinced that a person married to British national (resident in UK) does not intend to live with the spouse (in UK) but wishes / intends to return to Ireland to his/her parents.
MRI appointment? You can call from UK and get it cancelled.
Admission in 2012? You can withdraw your name after you are granted a UK visa.
The last time you applied for visa, did you mention your intention to marry in the UK? Or was the purpose mentioned as "visit" though you had plans to get married?
Imagine the ECO asking these questions when assessing your application!