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Hi all, thanks for your replies, i have done much reading but there are just a few points i need further clarification on: Frei, im a little confused about the residnce card and how long it will take. You say when i am working we will need to apply for a residence card, but then you say that residence card is the card valid for 5 years. What i really need to know is once i am working, we will need to apply straight away for something so that we do not breech the 3 months rule. Is that EUfam4? And is it valid for 6 months, how long does it take for them to issue the EUfam4? SO once we have EUfam4 status does that mean we can apply to UK? Because i would have been working...? Sorry i'm not clear on this at allfrei wrote:Your husband will require a type C visa (Visitors visa) pursuant to the EU directives, when you arrive in Ireland you will need to exercise your treaty rights in by engaging in employment, or self employed, the rest options would not apply to you as you are planning to move back to the UK it is only on those 2 bases an EEA family permit would be issued to your husband via the singh route.
After which you must have satisfied one of the above conditions, your husband will make an application for residence card, if all the documents received are deemed sufficient you would receive a letter in the post asking you to go to the local immigration office (Gardai) to get a 6 months 4EUFAM stamp, they expected his residence card application to be processed within this time frame, after a successful application he will receive another 4 EUFAM this time for 5 years long, it's referred to as Residence card.
He does not need to have a RC in his passport at all. Not relevant. What is relevant is that the British citizen has been working in Ireland.ltb86 wrote:Excellent thank you so much, this has exactly answered my queries! I feel more confident now.
So with the 'temporary' EUfam4 stamp in my husbands passport, are we able to apply to UK for EEA family permit, as clearly we would have been exercising treaty rights in order to get the temporary stamp?
Also, would we need medical insurance for all of us? I read somewhere else that if i was either working or could prove i was jobseeking, this is not required?
Thanks so much again!
Don't get all worked up already, it's not as so difficult as you have imagined, the bit I would consider difficult is getting your spouse an entry visa to Ireland, once that's been achieved the rest of it would be pretty straight forward really. you can easily travel from Ireland to the UK without having to apply for the family permit, once he is in everything will fall into place.ltb86 wrote:And thats what we shall do! But i wonder how long the UKBA take to issue EEA FP's? I bet we will be waiting some time! I just have this horrible thought running around in my head that its going to take ages, the whole process, but our savings will be going down and down and....we just want to get back to UK asap where everything is familiar and grounded!
Surely this is not necessary for the EUTR visa to come to Ireland, if they are married then all they should have to show is a legal marriage certificate? I understand your post if they were just partners, but OP said they will be married.frei wrote:Don't get all worked up already, it's not as so difficult as you have imagined, the bit I would consider difficult is getting your spouse an entry visa to Ireland, once that's been achieved the rest of it would be pretty straight forward really. you can easily travel from Ireland to the UK without having to apply for the family permit, once he is in everything will fall into place.ltb86 wrote:And thats what we shall do! But i wonder how long the UKBA take to issue EEA FP's? I bet we will be waiting some time! I just have this horrible thought running around in my head that its going to take ages, the whole process, but our savings will be going down and down and....we just want to get back to UK asap where everything is familiar and grounded!
You should try and make your application at the Irish embassy as soon as you can, make sure you provide tons of evidence of relationship history of course having a child together is a mile stone in achieving this but additional proofs such as email exchanges, telephone statements showing incoming and outgoing calls to him and from him would just make for a grand application.
I don't know about UKBA, but on the INIS site this isn't among the documents required listed for these visas for spouses and civil partners - only for unregistered partners.frei wrote:Surely it is a requirement mostly by the UKBA AND INIS, you could try making an application without this evidence and see how quickly they can have a reason to deny the application, they were suppose to know a genuine marriage from a convenience one , the only way to know this is by requesting these proofs
You can certainly apply to the Irish without one and I would like to know how that went, if you go on INIS website under visa category to join Irish spouse it's fully stated on the website for some dodgy reason it's been removed from the EU requirements because it has always been there in the past and even people who provided such evidence have been deemed not sufficient evidence enough and subsequently refused on that reason.st pauli wrote:I don't know about UKBA, but on the INIS site this isn't among the documents required listed for these visas for spouses and civil partners - only for unregistered partners.frei wrote:Surely it is a requirement mostly by the UKBA AND INIS, you could try making an application without this evidence and see how quickly they can have a reason to deny the application, they were suppose to know a genuine marriage from a convenience one , the only way to know this is by requesting these proofs
Maybe the EU commission came down on INIS as it's not usual to ask for such proof for non-EU spouses governed by the Directive 2004/58/EC . I'm not entirely sure it's technically legal.frei wrote:You can certainly apply to the Irish without one and I would like to know how that went, if you go on INIS website under visa category to join Irish spouse it's fully stated on the website for some dodgy reason it's been removed from the EU requirements because it has always been there in the past and even people who provided such evidence have been deemed not sufficient evidence enough and subsequently refused on that reason.st pauli wrote:I don't know about UKBA, but on the INIS site this isn't among the documents required listed for these visas for spouses and civil partners - only for unregistered partners.frei wrote:Surely it is a requirement mostly by the UKBA AND INIS, you could try making an application without this evidence and see how quickly they can have a reason to deny the application, they were suppose to know a genuine marriage from a convenience one , the only way to know this is by requesting these proofs
National governments are legally strictly limited in the information they can require. They typically ask for a lot more, but can not require it.frei wrote:Surely it is a requirement mostly by the UKBA AND INIS, you could try making an application without this evidence and see how quickly they can have a reason to deny the application, they were suppose to know a genuine marriage from a convenience one , the only way to know this is by requesting these proofs
4. [The applicant] appealed to the First-tier Tribunal expressing disappointment that her marriage had been characterised as one of convenience and pointing out that she had not been asked to provide such documents but that the telephone bill was in her husband’s name. She offered to show her album of photographs but expressed surprise that a marriage of 14 years standing of which there were two children with everyone living in a common household should be so treated. She had in fact provided information to this effect on the application form.
11. Mr Hopkin [UKBA presenting officer] realistically acknowledged that the refusal of the entry clearance was indefensible on its facts, although he reserved the right to argue that a failure to produce relevant evidence could justify the refusal of an EEA application [...]
40. In our judgement this case from first to last never had any appearance remotely suggesting that the marriage was one of convenience. The decision was flawed and not in accordance with the law. The First-tier Judge reached the right result on the evidence before him.
41. The Entry Clearance Officer’s appeal is accordingly dismissed. We direct that the family permit be issued promptly on receipt of this determination as it should have been eighteen months ago.