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Ref https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... s_v3_0.pdfIf the EEA national’s passport or ID card is not presented with their application you cannot insist these are submitted unless there are good reasons for doing so.
Such reasons may include:This list is not exhaustive and there may be other reasons why you must request the EEA national passport or ID card.
- no previous documentation issued (and so evidence of EEA nationality has not already been seen);
information suggests the EEA national has acquired another nationality which may have implications for their EEA status;
information suggests the EEA national is no longer in the UK;
you have suspicions that fraud has been involved in the application;
This follows the Upper Tribunal case of Barnett and Others (EEA Regulations: rights and documentation) Jamaica [2012] UKUT 142 (IAC)
No you can't turn up in person at HO HQ with your passport.frustratedbrit wrote:2) I see, so assuming no "other reasons" (on page 32 of Processes and Procedures) because there is nothing particularly suspicious or unusual about my application, the question is whether evidence of my nationality can be considered to have been "already seen". Surely this is something that can be appealed against, since it is the question itself, of whether or not my passport is needed, that is under dispute. How can I appeal something when I'm told I cannot appeal?
If I applied again, do you know whether there is a way of getting a photocopy confirmed? Perhaps I could physically turn up with my passport to some office somewhere and there would be an official who could issue a document that would confirm that the photocopy is a true copy of the original?
4) Thanks for the feedback, really helps. Can you confirm that documents in German don't need translation?
5) So in principle at least, in a post-Brexit scenario, PR applications made after some date soon after June 23rd could be thrown out for Surinder Singh cases?
6) The 6 months is what I thought was the interpretation of "prolonged absence". Maybe I'm getting confused with tax residency criteria here.
1) So the family PR clock started in Mar 2015 and subsequent short trip to Vietnam won't have impacted it (as less than 6 months).frustratedbrit wrote:We've actually had 4 applications for EEA Family Permits, all of which were successful. Our story is that my wife and stepson came to the UK for 5 months in 2011 under a spousal visitor visa, left the country but got refused further visitor visas. I got a job in the Netherlands where we lived for 5 months, and succeeded in getting a Family Permit at the end of 2013, returning to the UK for a few months (without applying for Residence Cards). But then I was offered a job in Germany in 2014, which I took but lost after 6 months. We stayed in Germany for a total of 12 months, and then returned by Family Permit in March 2015. We also applied two more times for Family Permits, once during 2014 from Germany, and once in late 2015 from Vietnam during a short visit. So we've been resident in the UK without gaps of more than 6 months since March 2015.
...
4) None of our Family Permit applications required translations of Dutch or German, even the one made in Vietnam. But looking now at page 36 of the Processes and Procedures document, it says all documents must be in English or have an official English translation (not sure what "official" means here). So to avoid further risk, I suppose we had better get these documents translated if we apply again. Do you by any chance know what makes a translation "official", how I could achieve this and at what cost? Would I really have to get pages and pages of bank statements and of my lengthy rental contract fully translated?
1) Yes.frustratedbrit wrote:Having entered the UK with EEA Family Permits under the Surinder Singh route, my wife and stepson will soon be applying for EEA(FM) residency cards to confirm their status in the UK.
...
So my questions are:
1) Do the same conditions about foreign-language documents apply for EEA(FM) applications as for EEA(PR) applications?
2) Is it really true that documents and/or translations accepted for EEA Family Permit applications may not be accepted for EEA(FM) applications?
3) Are our translations of Vietnamese documents insufficient for EEA(FM)?
4) What, precisely, is meant by a "qualified professional translator"?
5) Do I really have to get all of my German evidence, including a 30-page rental contract, a dozen official letters, and various school letters, fully translated into English?
6) Roughly, what is the going rate for this kind of translation? And can anyone recommend a good translator, or how to go about finding a good translator, that fits whatever is meant by "qualified" and "professional"?
For FM application use FM guidance.frustratedbrit wrote:Your answer only really answers Q1. The documents for EEA(FM) and EEA(PR) are the same in this respect (which is useful to know). But that means they are equally unclear. I am asking what is meant by "qualified professional translator", and just referring back to the same document that I was reading in all your answers doesn't really help. Or are you trying to make the point that it is all completely obvious?
If anyone has any guidance/experiences in this regard I would be most grateful. Are there people out there who paid to get lengthy rental contracts translated? How much did it cost? I know German people who are qualified teachers in both languages, and who have translated documents for people in the past. They can do a very good job at translation, but will the Home Office reject this? Are they "qualified professional translators" or not? Any experiences anyone?
frustratedbrit wrote:So my question is: what are the current rules for applying for a spousal visa if currently in the UK through Surinder Singh? Do we have to leave the country to make the application?
Well, you are neither of those so that looks okay.Apply to remain in the UK with family
You can apply to extend or switch in any of these routes if you’re eligible, except if you have permission to be in the UK:
as a visitor
for less than 6 months - unless you got your visa to get married or become civil partners or you got your visa to wait for the outcome of a family court or divorce
https://www.gov.uk/remain-in-uk-family/eligibilityYour application might be refused if, for example, you’ve:
got a criminal record in the UK or in another country
provided false or incomplete information to the Home Office
broken UK immigration law
Read the full guidance on refusals.
The Five year routefrustratedbrit wrote:MrSlyFox,
It's not at all clear to me that the paragraphs you quote apply to our case. There are these 2-year, 5-year and 10-year routes, explained in large technical documents. What route would we be taking?
It clear the two-year route doesn't apply, as you haven't applied prior to 9th of July 2012Partner (2-year route)
You can only extend your ‘family of a settled person visa’ in this route if you:
applied as a partner before 9 July 2012
are not eligible to settle
have kept to the terms of your visa
Do you meet these requirments?Family life as a partner (10-year route)
You must meet the eligibility requirements for the partner routes and you must also be in one of these situations:
there are serious reasons you and your partner can’t live together as a couple in another country
you have a child in the UK who is a British citizen or has lived in the UK for 7 years and it wouldn’t be in their best interests to leave the UK with you