Entrepreneurs having an active Company in one of this Countries can
apply for a Residence Permit for
themselves and later for the Family .
In second approach a naturalisation demand can be introduced after about
3 years.
Les Entrepreneurs ayant
une Société active dans un des Pays mentionnés , peuvent faire une
demande pour Permis de Résidence pour eux-mêmes , et plus tard pour
leur Familles.
En deuxième phase une
demande de naturalisation pourra être introduite après environ 3 ans.
Freedom for
Third-country nationals to travel within
the European Union:
EEC-Commission wants
to simplify the rules
Traduire en Français

On condition that they
have a valid travel document and, where appropriate, a visa or
residence permit,
Third-country
nationals will be able
to travel within the Schengen
area
for three months
under a proposal for a Directive
presented by the European
Commission today. The
Commission is also proposing a specific authorisation enabling
Third-country
nationals to travel for up to six months provided they do
not spend
more than three months
in any single Member State. In both cases, third-country
nationals must have sufficient
resources to cover the costs of their stay. Equally, they
must not be the subject
of an alert for the purposes of non-admission or be regarded
as a threat to public
order in a Member State.
Since 25 March 2001, the
area without controls on persons at internal borders has been
extended to all the Member
States with the exception of the United Kingdom and Ireland,
and to Norway and Iceland.
Within that area,
Third-country
nationals can in principle move freely for a maximum
period of three months.
With the new travel authorisation, that period could be extended
to six months.
The conditions governing
this "freedom to travel" sometimes lack transparency and are
fragmented between various
instruments. The Commission agrees with the European
Parliament that there
should be a single legal instrument setting out all the elements
determining the conditions
for exercising this freedom. Accordingly, the proposal for a
Directive that the Commission
has just adopted lays down the conditions in which
Third
-country
nationals can travel without undergoing checks at internal
borders, providing
that they have a valid
travel document and, where appropriate, a visa or residence
permit. They must also
have sufficient resources to cover the costs of their stay and
must not be the subject
of an alert for the purposes of non-admission or be regarded as
a threat to public order
in a Member State.
Third-country
nationals
holding a residence permit issued by a Member State are
exempted from the visa
requirement.
In principle, this freedom
of movement is limited in time, i.e. a maximum stay of three
months in any one Member
State in a six-month period.
After
that time, third-country nationals will have to acquire a residence
permit if they
wish to remain in the
Member State in question.However, the proposal for a Directive
also aims to regulate
the conditions of entry for travel purposes of several categories of
third-country national
whose situation cannot be regarded as constituting immigration
but who have a legitimate
interest in staying for up to six months (e.g.tourists,
researchers, artists on
tour, persons visiting family or undergoing
hospitalisation/convalescence
etc.). That is why it has been decided to introduce a
specific travel authorisation
enabling the holder to travel for a maximum period of six
months without staying in any one
Member State for more than three month