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Did he have a "Spouse Visa" or did he have an "EEA Family Permit"?ehuey wrote:Hello My husband is an non EU national I am British. We live in Northern Ireland and have just appealled his EEA2 European residency which has been approved. He is now waiting to hear from the home office to get this in his passport. His spouse visa for UK has also expired but he still has his Spanish Europen residency cardas we were married and lived in Spain before. Is it legally possible to travel to the Irish Republic from Northern Ireland for a holiday as we will probably have to wait quite a while for the home office to issue his EEA2 card. Thanks
check my post this is what happend to me ;-(ehuey wrote:Hello My husband is an non EU national I am British. We live in Northern Ireland and have just appealled his EEA2 European residency which has been approved. He is now waiting to hear from the home office to get this in his passport. His spouse visa for UK has also expired but he still has his Spanish Europen residency cardas we were married and lived in Spain before. Is it legally possible to travel to the Irish Republic from Northern Ireland for a holiday as we will probably have to wait quite a while for the home office to issue his EEA2 card. Thanks
What is your (EU) citizenship? Are you still resident in Spain, eg. did you leave less than 6 months ago and retain the option of returning if things do not go well in Ireland?ehuey wrote:he still has his Spanish Europen residency card
Do u mean with my RC I can travel to Ireland without visa? as I check on the Irish website and it is clearly stated that visa is required or is it a new law which I don't know of?Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:What is your (EU) citizenship? Are you still resident in Spain, eg. did you leave less than 6 months ago and retain the option of returning if things do not go well in Ireland?ehuey wrote:he still has his Spanish Europen residency card
There is the possibility of entering Ireland without a visa if your have a "Residence Card". But this would only be legally correct if have not "permanently" left spain and have been gone for less than 6 months. Plus you do not have your passport.
Well, mine is still valid... ve Uk RC issued last yr... was trying to visit Rep. of Ireland but was told that I will need a visa and had to send away my passport with the RC on it. Tuesday coming will make it 15 working but no news yet about my passport. so don't know if i did the right thing by sending it away for visa though its free visa application.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:http://www.immigrationboards.com/viewtopic.php?t=78980 is the policy.
But the question is whether the Residence Card is still valid. If you have permanently left Spain, or if you have been away for more than 6 months (in the last year), then the RC is likely not valid any more.
Whether anyone would know it was not valid is another question entirely...
I had understood you did not (yet) have the UK issued Residence Card. And that you still had the old Spanish Residence Card.was told that I will need a visa and had to send away my passport with the RC on it.
Sorry i guess I have Hijacked someone post lol... am not the original owner of this post, so i take it that u re mistaken me for someone else. I am a resident of United Kingdom due to been married to An irish citizen exercising her treaty right in the United Kingdom. though she is dual national. so Does it still make a different?Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:I am confused.
I had understood you did not (yet) have the UK issued Residence Card. And that you still had the old Spanish Residence Card.was told that I will need a visa and had to send away my passport with the RC on it.
Who have you applied for a visa from? Which RC was in the passport?
So if you have a UK issued Residence Card, then you can use that for visiting Ireland (when traveling with your partner).laspo24 wrote:Sorry i guess I have Hijacked someone post lol... am not the original owner of this post, so i take it that u re mistaken me for someone else. I am a resident of United Kingdom due to been married to An irish citizen exercising her treaty right in the United Kingdom. though she is dual national. so Does it still make a different?
Would this be same for the non-EEA spouse of a Swiss national where the UKRC states "Family member of a Swiss national"? I know some EU countries differentiate between EU/EEA and EFTA/Swiss. Haven't found anything concrete on the Irish embassy's site, esp. as this states the contrary: http://www.embassyofireland.co.uk/home/ ... x?id=75477Directive/2004/38/EC wrote: So if you have a UK issued Residence Card, then you can use that for visiting Ireland (when traveling with your partner)
The Directive only applies to EEA member states but Switzerland is not one of them. It was a choice made by the UK to issue a residence card. But they also label it accordingly.Plum70 wrote:Would this be same for the non-EEA spouse of a Swiss national where the UKRC states "Family member of a Swiss national"?
I take it that's a "No" then. Though again the bilateral agreements with CH should not allow for this differentiation; there is simply no (obvious) benefit in doing so. EU/EEA/EFTA = Freedom of movement.86ti wrote:The Directive only applies to EEA member states but Switzerland is not one of them. It was a choice made by the UK to issue a residence card. But they also label it accordingly.Plum70 wrote:Would this be same for the non-EEA spouse of a Swiss national where the UKRC states "Family member of a Swiss national"?
Which is why I do not understand the 'benefits' to the EU states who decide to differentiate.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:As far as I understand, the "agreement" between Switzerland and the EU largely parallels Directive 2004/38/EC.