Yes, Poland is part of the Schengen Area and Schengen visas are valid.
An immigrant is someone coming from a country other than the one that they are now in, usually with a requirement for documentation, like a visa, to enable them access to the country they are now in. In the context of Ireland, someone from the Republic of Ireland (the proper term for what people call southern Ireland) living in Northern Ireland, would not be considered an immigrant. Someone from the Republic of Ireland going to some other countries could be regarded as an immigrant. It depends on where they are going.
If you have an Australian employment visa from the UAE, it means that you are cleared to travel. Check with the Australian embassy or consulate before you travel to verify that your visa is valid and that your passport will not expire while you are gone. When you arrive in Australia, you must fulfill the terms of the visa by securing the type of employment your visa is for.
No difference. Poland is part of the Schengen area, all Polish tourist visas are automatically Schengen visas, and all Schengen tourist visas issued by other Schengen countries are valid in Poland.
Northern Ireland has a devolved government, as does Scotland and wales and the city of London. This means they make their own laws on things like education, health, environment etc. There are reserved matters which they may not make laws for, these are things like immigration, tax, nationality, defence etc. These are created by parliament. England does not have a devolved government, all its laws come straight from parliament. The whole of the UK elects members to Parliament every 4 years in a general election which can be called at anytime within the 4 year period by the prime minister. The party with the largest number of votes from the UK gets to form the government of the united kingdom. It is currently the labour party with Gordon Brown as its leader. Each of the devolved governments have a First Minister, kind of like a prime minister, except for northern Ireland which as two. The First Minister and Deputy First Minister. this is because 45% of people in Ni are Irish and 55% are British. The British want to stay with the UK, the Irish want Ni to join the republic and the island to be one country separate from the UK. One party cannot be in overall power in Ni as is the case of most governments around the world. If a unionist party were in power, they would make British laws which the Irish would not like and visa verse, so they share power. Department of Environment- Run by Unionist party Department of Education- Run by Irish National party etc etc
yes there are no borders between northern and southern ireland
No. Northern Ireland is part of the UK, so the visa will cover it.
They will need a visa to enter the United Kingdom in order to enter Northern Ireland.
Yes, you need a separate visa for Ireland. Ireland is not part of the Schengen Area. Schengen visas are not valid.
If you are travelling from the USA to Northern Ireland, you need a passport to go there. You probably will also need a visa to enter Northern Ireland but you can find this out if you look up the British government website.
It depends on where you are coming from As Northern Ireland is part of the UK you will need the same Visa that you would need to enter any other part of the UK. If you are a UK citizen you do not need one
As Northern Ireland is still part of the UK; the same rules will apply.
Ireland is not part of the Schengen Area. Schengen visas are not valid.
No.No.No.No.No.No.No.No.No.No.No.
No, Ireland is not part of the Schengen Area. Schengen visas are not valid.
Yes.
Ireland is not part of the Schengen Area so Schengen visas are not valid in Ireland (or the UK). You may need a visa unless you hold a passport from a country which doesn't need a visa for Ireland (e.g. USA). Check the Irish embassy for your country to see their rules.