- 05 juil. 2020, 12:26
#3187022
On va arrêter la de toute manière on tourne en rond.
Tu n'as pas besoin de Visa mais on te considère en voyage touristique. Sachant que de mémoire c'est 3mois de séjour sur une période de 12 mois consécutifs (a vérifier) donc si tu fais 2 x 2mois tu es hors clou.charlix a écrit : ↑05 juil. 2020, 12:12Pour conclure, Warbasse dit tout dans ce paragraphe, si tu ne restes pas plus de 3 mois tu n'as pas besoin de visaNopik a écrit : ↑05 juil. 2020, 11:00https://www.cyclingnews.com/news/warbas ... -cyclists/
Larry Warbasse (AG2R La Mondiale), one of a handful of Americans who travelled to Europe before the council of the European Union published its recommendations for the reopening of its member states' borders on July 1, says that professional cyclists should not be overly concerned about not getting in as long as they have a long-stay visa. Warbasse is at an altitude camp preparing for the season to resume with Strade Bianche on August 1.
The 30-year-old said that the woes of Ian Garrison (Deceuninck-Quickstep), who was stopped from flying from Atlanta to Amsterdam this week, had more to do with his lack of a visa or residency card.
"As professional cyclists, we probably spend more time here than the three months out of every six months which is what the tourist visa allows. Since I moved to Nice I've always had a visa," Warbasse told Cyclingnews. "It's a hassle to get - it's really not easy - but we can see now it's very important to get because it enables us to live here legally. Because we have a long-stay visa, we're allowed to come back in.
On va arrêter la de toute manière on tourne en rond.