I'm a new member
Reply #9 - April 03, 2013, 09:21 AM
Hey Naerys
Thanks for your advice..anyway he does not have family in my country..and well I have my ways to stop him,by danish law,as he is a stalker on my person,we just got a law here in DK that protect a person in this situation..
He also have some issues I know about and can use in the state when I go to make sure i get full custedy of my son,so he wont be able to see or get him..Anyway its all steps I am working on right now together with my caseworker.
Danish law request I just paste this from my government site..
You must normally meet the following basic conditions in order to be granted a visa:
Your passport or other form of valid travel document must be valid for three months past the visa expiration date. Moreover, the passport or travel document must have been issued within the past 10 years.
You must have the necessary means to pay for your stay and return trip. What will be considered as necessary funds will be determined by the Danish diplomatic mission and depends on the length of your stay, and whether you will stay at a hotel or with friends or family. As a general rule, you must have at your disposal approx. DKK 350 per day. A smaller amount may be accepted if you are staying in a private home and your host will cover all costs. If you are staying at a hotel, the amount must be greater, approx. DKK 500 per day.
You must hold a travel insurance policy to cover possible expenses in connection with a return for health reasons or death, indispensable medical treatment or acute hospitalisation during your stay. The insurance policy must cover all Schengen countries, and the minimum policy coverage is €30,000. The insurance policy must be valid for the same period as the visa. The validity of the visa may be shortened if the insurance policy does not cover the entire period.
You may not be registered as an undesirable in the Schengen Information System (SIS).
You may not have been deported from Denmark and given an entry ban.
You may not be listed on UN or EU sanction lists.
These conditions apply at the time your visa is issued, as well as when you enter and stay in the Schengen region. It is therefore important that you are able to document at all times that you have the necessary funds to pay for your stay and return trip, and that you hold a valid travel insurance policy. If you do not meet these conditions, your visa can be confiscated and revoked, in which case you will be required to leave the Schengen region immediately.
If the Immigration Service suspects that you intend to seek permanent or long-term residency in Denmark or another Schengen country, or that you may pose threat to national security or public safety, your visa application will be turned down.
If you remain in Denmark after your visa expires or if you attempt to use your visa stay to obtain permanent or long-term residency in Denmark, you can be given a penalty period of three or five years. And again there are still more issues that a visa seeker must apply to get the visa..
There are 3 different groups in the visa section for my country..and he belongs to the 2 one..which is :
The immigration group
The immigration group is divided into two sub-categories:
Countries whose citizens are required to have a certain attachment to the individual they wish to visit
Countries whose citizens are not required to have a certain attachment to the individual they wish to visit, but who must have a host in Denmark
The following countries are currently listed as part of the immigration country category whose applicants are required to have a certain attachment to the person residing in Denmark:
Armenia, Bangladesh, Belarus, Burma (Myanmar), Burundi, Cameroon, China, Egypt, Ethiopia, Gambia, Georgia, Ghana, India, Ivory Coast, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Russia, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, Vietnam and Yemen.
Citizens from countries in this group are normally granted visas if they are spouses, cohabiting partners or boyfriends/girlfriends, children irrespective of age and accompanying spouse, parents and accompanying spouse, siblings and accompanying spouse.
Visas are also granted to nieces, nephews and grandchildren under the age of 18 who wish to come to Denmark for a temporary holiday visit unaccompanied by their parents or another adult, close acquaintances of previously foreign-stationed Danes, sponsor children under 18 and applicants accompanying older, frail family members. Furthermore, a visa can be granted to spouses, cohabiting partners or boyfriends/girlfriends and children under 18 of a Danish citizen who has effectively established him/herself in a foreign country, if the couple plans to travel to Denmark on vacation, or similar.
In order to grant visas to boyfriends/girlfriends - including applicants wishing to travel to Denmark for the purpose of marriage - the couple must document that they are in an actual relationship. That is, they must be able to document that they are both unmarried and that they know each other personally, and that they have seen each other in the year leading up to the visa application. It is not enough that the couple only know each other through telephone and/or written contact. If the couple do not have a significant level of mutual personal knowledge, the visa application will be turned down.
For certain countries - Russia, China, Ukraine and India - so-called travel agency arrangements have been established, making it easier for citizens from these countries to visit Denmark as tourists. Read more about travel agency and tourist arrangements.
Currently, citizens from the following countries are not required to have a particular attachment to the person residing in Denmark:
Albania, Azerbaijan, Benin, Bosnia-Herzegovina*, Congo (Brazzaville), Macedonia (FYROM)*, Moldova, Mongolia, Montenegro*, Nepal, Niger, Peru, Philippines, Serbia*, Thailand, Togo, Tunesia and Zimbabwe.
*Citizens of Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Macedonia (FYROM), Montenegro or Serbia who hold a biometric passport are not required to hold a visa. Read more about visa requirements for visiting Denmark.
Visas are generally granted to applicants from these countries, no matter who they intend to visit, including friends and acquaintances. In other words, there must be a host in Denmark, but the applicant is not required to have a particular attachment to the host. Furthermore, a visa can be granted to a spouse, cohabiting partner or child under 18 of a Danish citizen residing outside Denmark if, for example, the couple wish to go on holiday in Denmark.
For applicants from the entire immigration group, an application for a visa will be turned down if the immigration authorities have reason to believe that an applicant may seek permanent or long-term residency in Denmark or another Schengen country.
This may be the case if the immigration authorities have particular reasons to suspect that an applicant will misuse his/her visa, for example, if he/she has previously violated the conditions for a visa or residence permit.
If the applicant is someone other than a spouse/partner, child under 18 or parent of the person in Denmark, the application will be turned down if the application authorities assess that his/her attachment to his/her country of residence is not strong enough to guarantee that he/she will return after the visa stay.
In connection with this assessment the authorities will consider which type of long-term residency the applicant is likely to seek.
In certain cases, an applicant can be granted a visa even if the authorities assess that he/she is likely to seek long-term residency. This will be the case if he/she is deemed likely to seek a type of residence permit which does will not cause a penalty period.