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EEA1 AND EEA2,EU husband need British passport,what can be my statu again?

hubbyvifi - 2009-08-15 01:50:50 - Immigration

Hi everyone, I apply Residence Card april 2009 and till now nothing from home office,today they want last 6 month payslips or tax or payment of national Insurance or a set of Audited accounts within 21 days, But my questions is 1-If H.O want more letter from us, after how long going to take proggress time anyne know about that or any experience? 2- my husband Polish nationaltyand came to England 2004 september and We want to apply for him British passport. For that we must fill up EEA3 form too, isnt it? if ansver is yes, he must stay this Country continue 5 years,and september 2009 we can apply that(eea3),but from home office we must sent more letter for eea1 and eea2 max.4th september 2009 if they are send his passport back before we sent eea3 form again how long its can take progress time? 3-if he has british passport ,am I wait for indefinite visa again 5 years or statu going to change? 4-Anyone has any experiance after more letter how long max. people waiting? thank you


Най-добър отговор:

sorry but your questions are a little difficult to understand but I will try to help - residence cards should take no longer than 6 months (see link item 1.9) however I understand that people are currently waiting for more than a year. If you need your passport to travel before this, then you have to apply again. Try and get help from your MP to speed up the process. - although your husband did not need a residence card when he arrived here in September 2004, he cannot apply for citizenship without having had a residence card to prove that he has been here for 5 years. It's a little trick the Home Office have for unwary foreigners. - So if he wants a British passport he will have to - apply for a residence card, wait 5 years, pass the 'life in the UK' test (he could do that now). There is also talk of would be citizens having to do voluntary work - so I'd volunteer for something - just in case - you do not say where you are from but the same rules would apply to you as the spouse of an EEA national, I think you can both apply for residence cards at the same time - get advice on this - remember under EEA rules as a spouse you have the right to live and work here. But to get things like ILR you will also have to show that you have not claimed benefits. - get specific immigration advice - if you don't qualify for free advice from somewhere like IAS it can be expensive but worth it to have someone guide you through the system which is complicated and changing all the time. Good luck

Други отговори:

Amber A - 2009-08-15 14:12:30
First you don't say where are you from. Second if you are already in UK and married for your Polish husband I don't see where is the problem. Third why he wants to apply for a british passport. Plus of course they will ask about your financial status because it is important if he could support you.

Pusia - 2009-08-16 16:18:09
sorry but your questions are a little difficult to understand but I will try to help - residence cards should take no longer than 6 months (see link item 1.9) however I understand that people are currently waiting for more than a year. If you need your passport to travel before this, then you have to apply again. Try and get help from your MP to speed up the process. - although your husband did not need a residence card when he arrived here in September 2004, he cannot apply for citizenship without having had a residence card to prove that he has been here for 5 years. It's a little trick the Home Office have for unwary foreigners. - So if he wants a British passport he will have to - apply for a residence card, wait 5 years, pass the 'life in the UK' test (he could do that now). There is also talk of would be citizens having to do voluntary work - so I'd volunteer for something - just in case - you do not say where you are from but the same rules would apply to you as the spouse of an EEA national, I think you can both apply for residence cards at the same time - get advice on this - remember under EEA rules as a spouse you have the right to live and work here. But to get things like ILR you will also have to show that you have not claimed benefits. - get specific immigration advice - if you don't qualify for free advice from somewhere like IAS it can be expensive but worth it to have someone guide you through the system which is complicated and changing all the time. Good luck


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