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Please check further this information. Most country members have provisions to allow their citizens to naturalise themselves in other EEA member states. I know Germany has such provision in place, for example.eeaman01 wrote: Then, the EEA national naturalises and on the day of the swear-in ceremony officially becomes a British citizen. However, as a result of his home country laws, on that day, the EEA national automatically loses their original citizenship.
I don't understand why you're questioning the loss of citizenship. Several EEA countries don't allow dual citizenship, for very good reasons. Therefore, please take this assumption as a given. If I wasn't sure about this, I wouldn't be posting the question to begin with... Thanks.Please check further this information. Most country members have provisions to allow their citizens to naturalise themselves in other EEA member states. I know Germany has such provision in place, for example.
I'm not questioning the loss of citizenship, I'm just letting you know that this area is not as black and white as expected. Each country has its own policy and generally their position in the matter is not well presented. I have only warned you to check further, as an advice, not neglecting what you have said.eeaman01 wrote:I don't understand why you're questioning the loss of citizenship. Several EEA countries don't allow dual citizenship, for very good reasons. Therefore, please take this assumption as a given. If I wasn't sure about this, I wouldn't be posting the question to begin with... Thanks.Please check further this information. Most country members have provisions to allow their citizens to naturalise themselves in other EEA member states. I know Germany has such provision in place, for example.
Thank you very much, Jambo. This is exactly what I was looking for. I have reviewed the thread thoroughly.Jambo wrote:See similar discussion (although in that case the non EEA has been living in the UK for several years already) - non EEA national' s spouse(EEA) became British! help requird.
In short, I would advise leaving it in the hypothetical stage as the practical implications are not clear.
At least two that I know of: Czech Republic, Slovak RepublicDirective/2004/38/EC wrote:eeaman01, which EU country is this? It is definitely not Germany or Poland.
This has now gone from hypothetical stage to the very real stage:Jambo wrote:See similar discussion (although in that case the non EEA has been living in the UK for several years already) - non EEA national' s spouse(EEA) became British! help requird.
In short, I would advise leaving it in the hypothetical stage as the practical implications are not clear.
The non-EEA national is physically abroad already. Can EEA4 be sent in while abroad? Also, if absences prevent qualification for PR, what other routes exist?Jambo wrote:If the RC expired, then I assume the non EEA national has spent at least 5 years in the UK and obtained PR status (unless there were absences of more than 6 months a year). In that case, the simplest would be to apply for PR confirmation using EEA4. hopefully the EEA national still holds his passport/ID card but even without it, the non EEA national should be able to secure confirmation.
It would be wise not to travel abroad until the PR confirmation arrives.
Is this explicitly stated anywhere? Have you heard of anyone trying and being refused?Obie wrote:A Residence Card or Permanent Residence Card cannot be applied for from overseas.
This indicate that it is envisaged that a Residence Card is issued to someone whose planned residence is for more than 3 months.[url=http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2004:158:0077:0123:EN:PDF][b]Article 9 Administrative formalities for family members who are not nationals of a Member State[/b][/url] wrote: 1. Member States shall issue a residence card
to family members of a Union citizen who are not
nationals of a Member State, where the planned period of residence is for more than three months.
2. The deadline for submitting the residence card
application may not be less than three months
from the date of arrival.
Hm... but we are not dealing with a candidate who is "living overseas", only who is "present overseas". If one agrees that a history of having had a Residence Card in the past or having met criteria to qualify for PR constitutes that person being normally resident in the UK merely with a temporary absence (so long as continuity of residence isn't broken for PR purposes in case of PR), then such a person qualifies for PR confirmation regardless of where they are physically present at the moment. It would be unjust (or possibly outright illegal) to deny them confirmation of PR if they have acquired it, regardless of where they are physically present at the moment.Obie wrote:This indicate that it is envisaged that a Residence Card is issued to someone whose planned residence is for more than 3 months.[url=http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2004:158:0077:0123:EN:PDF][b]Article 9 Administrative formalities for family members who are not nationals of a Member State[/b][/url] wrote: 1. Member States shall issue a residence card
to family members of a Union citizen who are not
nationals of a Member State, where the planned period of residence is for more than three months.
2. The deadline for submitting the residence card
application may not be less than three months
from the date of arrival.
Paragraph 2 also states that the deadline should not be less than 3 months from the day of arrival. All these indicates that a residence card is intended to be issued to someone residing in the host state.
Article 5 which provides for the issuance of visa, will be otiose, if people can apply for a residence card before they enter the host state.
Article 10 also require the applicant for Residence Card to provide evidence of the EU citizens registration Certificate, or in the absence of it, evidence of residence in the Host state.
Also Article 10(2E) talks about document issued by the authority in the country of origin, or country from which they are arriving.
All this indicates the point that a Residence card could not be issued to someone living overseas.
It doesn't seem to be UKBA policy to refuse applications made while physically present overseas either.I accept that a person who makes a Residence Card Application, can travel and return to the UK, during the time their application is being processed, but it is not the UKBA's policy or the Entry Clearance office policy or within its power to accept an application for Residence Card from someone overseas, or to issue it to such person.
In practice if someone gets his passport to the UK and someone else posts an application to Liverpool with a UK address, then the HO is unlikely to realise the applicant is not present in the UK. I don't think that doing so is illegal but is the applicant willing to wait abroad 6 months until a decision is made?eeaman01 wrote:Did anyone try and get refused (whether that's for a Residence Card or a PR)?