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Posted

this is a question for my wife, we are seperated now but (not divorced) she is here on eea family permit, she has a valid 5 yr resident stamp with 2 and a half yrs remaining.we have a 9 mth old baby daughter born here in uk with a uk passport. my wife is living apart from me legally, she works 16 hours per week and has her own 3 bedroom house ,she is on low income but she gets working family tax credits and child tax credits. she wants her two sons aged 9 to come and join her in uk . can she make this visa herself and is she entitled to have her sons be with her here in uk. remember we are not divorced and i am still exercising my treaty rights as a uk citizen inside the eu. i am on incapacity benefit and out of work.

please only those in the know need advise me of this as i dont want to give my wife any wrong info.

thanks in advance.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

You say your wife has an EEA family permit/residence card, yet you are living in the UK claiming incapacity benefit and out of work. You also say that you are a UK citizen exercising your treaty rights to live in the EU.

Confusing, please clarify the exact situation.

<deleted> great, so much for the so called visa experts on here lol

To be frank, your attitude toward other members across the forums, of which the above is a mild example, does not inspire a great desire to go to the trouble of researching an answer for you.

Posted
Dmax, probably a lot of members scratching their heads thinking about all the handouts you are yours are getting in the UK and you want to bring more into the UK for more handouts when there are UK pensioners in Thailand that can't get an inflation increase, so stay cool with your replies man, l am sure someone will be of help. :)

Dmax and his wife are LEGALLY entitled to claim whatever they are getting in the uk,thats the beauty of living in the uk,as for the pensioners living in thailand,well nobody's put a gun to there head and told them move there,they must of known about the down sides of permanently leaving the uk,

(the benefits side of it im talking about).

Posted

Despite the above post, I've just deleted another off topic post.

Any more and I'll start handing out warnings and suspensions!

If people, and you know who you are, want to continue their discussion about UK benefits and immigrants, then take it elsewhere.

Posted

Despite visiting the forum several times since his last post in this topic, the OP has not commented or provided the information asked for.

A search of his posting history shows that he has asked this question before and been given advice on how to proceed; the last occasion being August last year.

For these reasons, I am closing this topic.

Dmax, if you do wish to expand on your situation and seek further advice, PM me and I will consider reopening this topic.

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