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WE LOOK AT HOW THE INCOMING ENTRY-EXIT SYSTEM WILL WORK WITH REGARDS TO FOREIGN NATIONALS RESIDENT IN THE EU READER QUESTION: WILL FRENCH RESIDENTS WHO ARE WA CARD HOLDERS ALSO HAVE TO GIVE
THEIR FINGERPRINTS AND HAVE A PHOTO TAKEN THE FIRST TIME THEY TRAVEL AFTER THE EU ENTRY/EXIT SYSTEM (EES) LAUNCHES IN MAY? The EU’s new border Entry-Exit System (EES) is set to come into
place in May 2023, followed by the Etias visa-waiver scheme from November. READ MORE: WHAT IS THE EU’S INCOMING ETIAS TRAVEL AUTHORISATION SCHEME? READ MORE: HOW WILL ETIAS EU VISA-WAIVER
SCHEME AFFECT RESIDENTS OF FRANCE? EES will track comings and goings of non-EU visitors to the Schengen area, including having their fingerprints scanned and a photo taken for entry into a
database on first entry after implementation. They will be kept for three years. Passports will also be scanned to log a holder’s details and record their dates of entry and exit, replacing
the need for a passport stamp for visitors to the area. Travellers’ identities will be checked against security lists. Pre-registration booths are planned at some airports but, at least for
the time being, it is expected that people will still need to pass in front of an officer at a desk for final validation. EES and Etias will apply to non-EU nationals either with a
short-stay visa or who do not need a visa to visit for 90 days in any 180-day period. It will, of course, not apply to EU citizens nor to certain other people benefiting from exemptions,
such as diplomats or transport workers. But it can apply to EU citizens’ close non-EU relatives who do not hold an EU country residency card. However, the European Commission has stated that
it will not apply to non-EU nationals who hold long-stay visas and/or residency cards for an EU state. As such, no, Britons who live in France are not affected and will not have to provide
fingerprints and a photo for the database. “When crossing the borders, holders of EU residence permits should be able to present to the border authorities their valid travel documents and
residence permits,” the Commission states. You can find out more about this on the EU website. RELATED ARTICLES FRENCH AIRPORTS WORRIED ABOUT EXTRA WAITING DUE TO EU ENTRY/EXIT PLAN
PASSPORTS, ETIAS, EES: CHANGES TO EUROPEAN BORDER CONTROL IN 2023 LONGER WAITING TIMES EXPECTED DUE TO NEW EU BORDER CHECKS