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What exactly did they say in the refusal?LeLe wrote:Based on 1) insufficient of document; 2)no EEA passport as proof of ID, they refused my application and saying I do not have the right to appeal. They returned all my supporting document but retained my passport (as for them I appear to have no rights to stay in the UK and that I need to contact the regional immigration office who have my passport to arrange my date of departure!)
Good luck. My wife applied 28 months ago, and her application is still at stage 1 (did they gave you the code K to follow the application on their web site?).LeLe wrote:2) I don't mind not getting my PR as I should be getting my Italian passport next year
Also, if you are getting Italian citizenship though your spouse, why you don't just send UKBA your spouse's national ID? I did EEA1, EEA2 and EEA3 sending only my national ID, I know a few friends who have done same, UKBA always accepted that.LeLe wrote:2) I don't mind not getting my PR as I should be getting my Italian passport next year.
For a second I thought you were referring to your wife's EEA4 taking 2+ years so far! No doubt you're referring to her application for Italian citizenship. This isn't uncommon for EU naturalisation timelines: For instance the Swiss ask that no enquiries be made within the first two years of application.aledeniz wrote:Good luck. My wife applied 28 months ago, and her application is still at stage 1 (did they gave you the code K to follow the application on their web site?).LeLe wrote:2) I don't mind not getting my PR as I should be getting my Italian passport next year
Yes, this is exactly what they told us too. On the other hand, the way the Italian law is written, if a citizen spouse's application is not refused in the first 2 years, they cannot refuse it anymore so at least the outcome is known, if not the when.Plum70 wrote:For instance the Swiss ask that no enquiries be made within the first two years of application
@LeLE, please read the case law that Obie has linked to. It is relevant to your case.Obie wrote:Also See Barnet
I think the refusal does not seem justified so far as the ID aspect is concerned.
I think you should pursue the PR application. No need to apply for EEA 2
I'm not a lawyer, but this is my understanding:LeLe wrote:Please could you tell me where the law is written? Thanks. My Italian passport application has gone pass 2 years but was told the processing time has changed to 3 years.
Aledeniz, for the benefit of LeLe the above links do not seem to be working. You may wish to repost.aledeniz wrote:
I'm not a lawyer, but this is my understanding:
Art. 3 of http://www.interno.gov.it/mininterno/si ... ne_32.html, 730 days.
Art. 8, comma 2 of
http://www.interno.gov.it/mininterno/si ... ne_30.html, after 2 years they cannot refuse anymore.
The subjective right for citizens' spouses has been tested many times in Courts of Law. This is from 1993: http://www.asgi.it/public/parser_downlo ... 1_1993.pdf, but you may find more recent judgements. Adult foreigners who are not citizens' spouses in the general case don't enjoy subjective right to citizenship.
Thank you, Plum70, I fixed the links in place, there was a trailing comma in each of them.Plum70 wrote:Aledeniz, for the benefit of LeLe the above links do not seem to be working. You may wish to repost.
Also, in this document, in Italian, you should find most of what you may want to know about the naturalisation process for spouses of Italian citizens:aledeniz wrote:I'm not a lawyer, but this is my understanding:
With my EEA3 application, I sent bank statements and payslips covering more than 5 years (actually 6 full years). I was able to confirm they did check them, because I put them in a specific pattern, and when they sent those back were instead chronologically ordered. I sent also P60s for 6 years, 2 letters from my employers confirming employment for the previous 6 years, tenancy agreements covering 5 years, my 6 years old registration certificate (the one I got through the EEA1 application), plus printouts of emails related to my working life (i.e. request for interviews, a redundancy agreement from my first employer, job offers).LeLe wrote:Thanks to all again. At the moment I will just gather more supporting documents and we have asked my husband's bank to send us every single bankstatement from 2007 (this is from his salary account). We just want to give HO no reason to refuse my application this time.
While you can appeal, I would personally follow Plum70's suggestion, and I would first resubmit my application with my EEA spouse's passport or ID card (plus all bank statements and what-else you may collect meanwhile) for reconsideration, addressing the package to the attention of the caseworker responsible for my case (do you have the reference number?) and ask that the application be prioritized as the refusal was certainly premature, to say the least.LeLe wrote:Note the 'unless' bit. Does that mean I can appeal?? As I can provide a valid EEA passport with no problem!
On a personal note, I do always invite every EU citizen who is a long term resident in the UK to apply through the EEA3 to get the document certifying permanent residence and to get the citizenship whenever possible.LeLe wrote:Ans2) My husband didn't apply PR, as it's not necessary. He didn't have a ID card, only passport.