planet101 wrote:Viennalove, I joined this forum solely so I could refute the absolutely ridiculous, unfounded responses you got to your questions. I understand exactly how frustrated you must be because I was in your exact situation last September. I can tell you that being in the exact same position as you, I was able to enter the UK with my non-EU spouse at port with a Code 1A stamp in September 2011 and would highly recommend you try this also. We arrived at the port in Brussels with our marriage certificate and my UK passport as well as my husbands residence permit from the Netherlands. The border agent was not at all happy about the situation and made the same sort of unfounded claims as the responses in this thread. She made us miss our first train and then made us sit in a waiting area for about 20 minutes while her colleague looked into the matter. During this time (she had been quite literally fuming up until that point), she came and spoke to us calmly and stated that she thought the UK position was unfair to British nationals and also that she knew that under EU law she had to let my husband and I enter the UK with the Code 1A stamp. We were allowed to enter and he was given a Code 1A stamp valid for 6 months and were put on the next train. He was able to work during this time and even had a recourse to public funds if wanted to (which we did not).
I am a British national born in the UK in 1994 I migrated to Canada with my parents and resided there until 2010. In Sept 2010 I moved to Maastricht Netherlands to start a law program. I had fallen in love with a man in Canada before i left and we got married in Toronto in November 2010 (I went home for the wedding on a week break between semesters). In February 2011 he joined me in the Netherlands and the Dutch authorities issued him with a five year residence permit as the husband of an EU national. This required very little effort on our part and all we had to do was submit our marriage certificate and proof of funds. In September 2011, due to lack of employment opportunities in the Netherlands (language barriers), I decided to transfer to a law program here in the UK. I was going through the exact same hell you are going through right now.
The situation for the UK, especially where it concerns British nationals, is very confusing. This is because the UK has taken a narrow approach in its application of Directive 2004/38 and restricts the right of British nationals to return from another Member State with their spouse only in instances where they have worked or been self employed in another Member State (as per the Surinder Singh/Eind cases). The principles underlying these cases should also extend to students and self sufficient individuals but sadly it does not.
After my husband and I entered the UK at port with a code 1A stamp, we were given 6 months to apply for his residence permit (EEA2 application). We did this in April 2012 and we just received a rejection on September 7 2012. We are now appealing this decision on the grounds that regulation 9 of the 2006 Immigration Regulations disproportionately and unnecessarily restricts my right to free movement as per Article 21 of the TFEU. The case of Zambrano shows that a right to free movement should not be restricted without objective justification and by denying students and self sufficient individuals the same rights as workers or self employed individuals is a clear violation of Article 21. If my appeal fails, I will take judicial review proceedings against the UKBA / Tribunal and again if that fails I will take my case to the ECHR.
As union citizens we have certain rights that are provided to us and national law should not be able to curtail those rights from their inadequate or restrictive implementation of EU directives.
I hope this helps with your query and that you are able to bring your husband over with you if you choose to get married.
I don’t think you read the OP question very well and I don’t think you know much about the EEA Route, I believe you are just one of the lucky one.
This is what you said:
(In February 2011 he joined me in the Netherlands and the Dutch authorities issued him with a five year residence permit as the husband of an EU national. This required very little effort on our part and all we had to do was submit our marriage certificate and proof of funds. In September 2011, due to lack of employment opportunities in the Netherlands (language barriers), I decided to transfer to a law program here in the UK. I was going through the exact same hell you are going through right now. )
Your situation is totally different from the OP question, The OP EEA is not exercising treaty right in Austria and the spouse do not have right to stay in Austria under EEA Route unlike your that have a 5yrs residence card. The OP EEA is not ready to stay longer in Austria so as to exercise the treaty right in Austria as a student or a worker. So you got all the answer totally wrong, you need to read very well the EEA Free movement laws before you accuse everyone on this forum as a dumb.
The immigration that stop you and your spouse when coming to UK do not know their job, Your spouse have a 5yrs residence card in the Netherlands, that is a prove that you have exercise your treaty right in Netherlands and returning home as an British who has exercise his treaty right in another EU country with your spouse.
-Can you tell me what the OP will tell them at the port on entry about exercising treaty right in Austria?
-if he is allow to enter, what prove will the OP use when applying for a residence card inside UK as a British that has exercise treaty right in another EU.
I don’t think you understand anything about EEA Route, you are just one of the lucky one and moreover, a Canadian do not need visa to enter UK even if he or she is not your spouse. The Canadians have visa weaver agreement with UK.