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Are they implying that because my parents initially entered Ireland on Visitor Visa and soon after that applied for EU1(Residence Card) that they are not living with me? I provided loads of document to confirm that all three of us reside at the same address.However, you are not living with the British national in (the EEA State), nor were you living together in (the EEA state) before the British National returned to the UK as defined under the regulations. I note that you have held a UK visit visa for number of years and last arrived in UK on early/2013 as a visitor, you left the UK for Ireland without a visa via the Common travel area between the UK and Ireland and was granted admission to Ireland on Feb/2013 as a Visitor.
Yes that was EU1 application and Irish authorities gave temporary Stamp4 while waiting for residence card. What is unlawful about this?You later obtained an extension from Irish authorities until mid/2013, I am not satisfied that you are lawfully residing in an EEA state in which the EEA National resided and are dependent on the EEA national or a member of his/her household if you are a visitor in the EEA State.
It doenst matter if EEA National moved to another State for this... although they seems to have removed that sentence from the UKBA website but the regulation still stands.I am also aware that your sponsors only recently move to Ireland in early 2013, set up his business at the same time, now less than 7 months later he’s chosen to move back to the UK with you and your spouse has his dependent relatives. When prior to this you and your wife where issued visit visa to the UK based on the fact that you had a comfortable standard of living in your country and lived independent life. Therefore I am not satisfied that the Regulations apply in this case.
Gurus, what do you suggest i do next?I therefore refuse your EEA family permit application because I am not satisfied that you meet all of the requirements of Regulation 9of the Immigration (EEA) regulations 2006.
Yes my parents applied for UK Visitor Visa back in Mar 2011 (valid for two years, ended Mar 2013). Even at that time although they showed some funds (very minimal) i was the sponsor for the Visit. It was the same visa and the Irish waiver program we used to initially enter Ireland in Feb 2013. Although the Visitor visa was issued more than 2.5 years ago and ended 6 month ago and among other things, including various dependency requirement my father has turned 65+.What is most concerning, is the fact that they claim your parents were issued a visa on the basis that they have a comfortable life in their home country. If this is true, then the question of genuine dependency comes in.
wiggsy
drive to n. ireland and then get a ferry to the mainland... Smile
- although not strictly legal. once in the UK your in the UK... and therefore if they wish to remove you, as your right of residence comes from the EEA regs you have a right of appeal.
The ECO seems to have copied the text from here -I think the officer was trying to interprete surinder Singh literarily. They are saying that you are not currently in the UK with your parents to benefit from the case law. The first 'EU State' mentioned is the UK, and the second 'Eu state' is IRELAND, from reading the reasons for refusal.
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/polic ... /#header23
x. The applicant is the spouse / civil partner of the British national but is not/was not living with the British national in the EEA State (Surinder Singh)
'You have applied for admission to the United Kingdom in accordance with Regulation 9 of the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006 as the family member of a British national who has been / was previously working or self-employed in another Member State. However, you are not living with the British national in (the EEA State), nor were you living together in (the EEA State) before the British national returned to the UK. Therefore, I am not satisfied that the Regulations apply in this case.'
Yes you are right, towards the end of the application, under more information we did write that - "We are waiting for RC in Ireland", but i think the ECO clearly missed that part and TBH it was a one liner.Also, they are assuming that Ireland gave you a visit visa, because I imagine you didn't mention the eu residence card application pending in Ireland.
Do you mean on the basis of RC in Ireland we can prove they were dependent on me? Agreed but what if INIS reject the application too?Unfortunately, Ireland will be the best to prove that your parents were dependent in their country,
Can i apply in UK, even if they are not in UK? on their behalf?and then you may have to return to the UK TO APPLY FOR your parents to join you there.
Do you mean apply apply when i get to UK? And they wait in Ireland?This is the best way to satisfy the misinterpretation of the rules by the officer. SINGH CASE WILL TAKE EFFECT WHEN YOU ARE IN UK, EVEN IF YOUR PARENTS DON'T HAVE RC.
The only way is FP right or am i missing something?THe story will be even better if you apply for RC AFTER you find a way to get to the Uk with your parents.
I agree this is really key, i do have some proof their transfer funds to them while they resided with me in UK and that they were living with me.You also need to show dependency in Uk prior to going to Ireland to show that your parents were not just going for a visit.
~hey,nemo wrote:wiggsy
drive to n. ireland and then get a ferry to the mainland... Smile
- although not strictly legal. once in the UK your in the UK... and therefore if they wish to remove you, as your right of residence comes from the EEA regs you have a right of appeal.
Wiggy .. thanks for the suggestion... i do want to keep the status as legal as possible. So wondering what about going via the Ferry from Dublin and requesting Code1a on the port... what the boards view ?
Two problems i can see with this...
1. i dont know how easy it is to get this on port for Dependent parents.
2. If refused on port we dont have re-entry visa for Ireland
Phrase ... rock and a hard place... comes to mind !!
Option 2- present evidence of dependence in UK, saying that your mum has been dependent on you from UK which was the basis of entering Ireland, and she continued exercising the treaty right in Ireland, and you all want to visit UK again using an EU family permit.
Should it be dependency in only UK or also in India...? that we need to prove? as they were UK for a very short period before going to Ireland?It will be up to you to prove this by showing dependency in Uk as the basis for coming to Ireland.