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I Applied For A Uk Residency Card In 2012

I am a non-EU national living in the EU with a residence card. Do I need a visa to go to another EU country?

Bulgaria and the Schengen AreaJoining the Schengen area is a key priority of our country. The Bulgarian government is highly committed to fulfilling one of the key national priorities – Bulgaria’s accession to the Schengen area. A well-functioning coordination between ministries and institutions has been established to this end on political and expert level.The efforts in the preparation process have been focused on meeting the high Schengen standards and securing reliable external borders.In order to meet the Schengen criteria Bulgaria undertook all necessary actions in view of harmonizing immediately the national to the European law, updating our international base of treaties, providing the relevant state-of-the-art technical equipment and infrastructure and enhancing the administrative capacity whereby our country uses the best practice of the EU member states.Currently Bulgaria issues national visas only. Those visas do not give their holders the right to enter the Schengen area.Visa-free regime for holders of Schengen visas for a stay of up to 90 daysOn 25 January 2012 the Council of Ministers of the Republic of Bulgaria adopted a decision according to which by the date of Bulgaria’s accession to the Schengen area, our country will unilaterally apply a visa-free system for holders of valid Schengen visas. They will have the right to enter and reside in the Republic of Bulgaria for a period of no more than three months in any six-month period from the date of the first entry, without needing to have a Bulgarian short-stay visa. The decision entered into force on 31.01.2012.Visa-free regime for holders of valid visas and residence permits issued by Romania, Cyprus and Croatia for a stay of up to 90 daysOn 03 July 2014 the Council of Ministers of the Republic of Bulgaria adopted a decision according to which by the date of Bulgaria’s accession to the Schengen area, our country will unilaterally apply a visa-free system for holders of valid visas and residence permits issued by Romania, Cyprus and Croation for a stay of up to 90 days. They will have the right to enter and stay in the Republic of Bulgaria for a period of no more than 90 days in any 180-day period period , without needing to have a Bulgarian short-stay visa.

Is getting a DENMARK VISA (Green card) easier?

No such thing as "green card" in Denmark. That's an American "thing." What you mean is you want permission to legally reside permanently in Denmark. Not gonna happen. Denmark has really cracked down on immigration and it is now one of the toughest countries to immigrate to, along with Japan, China, Korea, India, Switzerland.

It's a small country, few jobs, very well educated populace, and they've had a horrible time with immigrants and immigration-law violators, especially from certain countries. Plus their tax rates are very high. Wahtever salaries you might hear of, you have to live on about 40% of that as you will never see the rest - goes to taxes first. You will have a very difficult time finding any job which offers a temporary employment visa, and have no realistic chance of immigration.

UK student visas require you to return to your country of citizenship. Don't try to get around that requirement! You do need to go home as soon as you finish school.

As a non-EU citizen with a valid Italian residence permit, do I need a visa to visit Iceland?

Visas are issued to citizens of countries - so without knowing which country/countries you are a citizen of, no one can answer.Your PR status in Italy doesn’t matter a bit to most countries, except Italy of course.Iceland Visa: Application, Requirements. Apply for Icelandic Visas Online.

Green card expired 10 years ago, is it still possible to renew it?

Well, let's see here. Not enough info, but you do not say how long your parents have been out of the country--but it does not matter--once you have been issued a permanent green card, you can not stay out of the US for more then 6 months each year. Ten years with an expired green card has voided their status here with-in the US. They can not try to enter the US on their green cards--they can not fill out a I-90 form--they will be rejected .
Sorry to say-but your parents will have apply all over again if they wish to come back to live in the US. Maybe apply for a visiting visa, and stay--like every one else does.
Maybe you can sponsor them. You do not mention if you are on a green card or if you have become a naturalized citizen, or if you have maintained dual citizenship--you do not mention where your homeland is nor where your parents are.
But--it might be a thought for you to have your parents apply to come back to this country--you become a citizen and sponsor them--other wise they will have to remain in the country which they have been living in for the last who knows how long.
Hope this helped. Good luck to you.

Divorce after green card?

I got married to my husband Oct 2012. He applied for green card since he was on student visa and we had 1 interview. Later in 2014 he filed another form which I believe he got his permanent residency. Now he has filed for a divorce right after he became a permanent resident. Doesn't he need me to be there at least for 5 years so he can apply for citizenship? Can I report him to USCIS? What if I get a divorce lawyer and say he married me for green card? What would be best for me? I believe he did this for a green card.

If kids are born in UK from non British parents, how do they get citizenship?

Just stay in the UK. If such a person remains in the UK for the first ten years of his or her life, and is not absent from the UK for more than 90 days during any of those years, then he or she is entitled to apply for registration as a British citizen.I see this answer has been collapsed by down votes. The answer is true, accurate, and is, without doubt, the easiest way for kids born in the UK from non-British parents to get UK citizenship. Before downvoting, read the reference, which is from the government of the UK. From that reference:“You lived in the UK until you were 10You can register to become a British citizen if you were born in the UK on or after 1 January 1983 and neither of your parents was a British citizen or settled at that time.You must:be 10 or olderand have lived in the UK until you were 10 or olderYou must also normally have spent no more than 90 days outside the UK in each of the first 10 years of your life.If you spent more time than this outside the UK but there are special reasons for this, you’ll need to explain them on the form.Apply using form T. Read the guidance before you apply.”Register as a British citizenYou can find the form and guide here:Application to register as British citizen: form TI will, however, add Sue Ambrose’s caveat that “it is best to take advice from an immigration lawyer based on your own and the child’s/children’s circumstances.”

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