The Scotsman

Queen’s bodyguard in Brexit uncertaint­y

● French-born wife fearing for her future right to stay in UK after 2019

- By DAN O’DONOGHUE

A former marine and serving bodyguard to the Queen has been left “angry and frustrated” after his French wife of 24 years was left fearing for her future right to stay in the UK.

Simon Milne, MBE, 58, has served in Northern Ireland and Bosnia and is one of 27 Gentlemen at Arms who guard the Queen on royal occasions.

His wife Francoise, 50, applied for a permanent residency card after the government “failed to clarify” the future rights of EU nationals living in the UK.

Mrs Milne, who has three children with her husband, said her applicatio­n was refused in October as she could not prove she was “selfsuffic­ient”, adding that she has been left “scared and confused” about the future.

The couple’s MP, the SNP’S Deidre Brock, has written to ministers to raise their case.

Mr Milne, who is chief executive of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, said he finds the decision “extraordin­ary”.

He said: “With the uncertaint­y around Brexit at the moment my wife decided to apply for permanent residency.

“She has supported me through my career with the Royal Marines and now in my current role. I am flabbergas­ted with this decision, I am angry and frustrated. I can only hope that it is an unintended oversight.”

Mrs Milne, who lives in Edinburgh, said her “world has been shattered” by the Brexit vote.

She said: “It felt like I had

0 French-born Francoise Milne and her husband Simon from Edinburgh. Mrs Milne applied for a permanent residency card but was refused been cut in half when the vote came back yes, my children were crying. I never felt I needed to claim dual nationalit­y before, I could move about freely and work freely, now it feels like a lot of freedom has gone.”

Mrs Milne said she was refused a residency card because she could not prove she was “self-sufficient”.

She said: “I do a little bit of upholstery, I never make enough to support myself and rely on my husband. They will not take into account that I am married to a British man, that is irrelevant, it’s hard to believe.

“I don’t know what will happen after 2019, I don’t know if there will be time limits on how long I can stay in the country, if I want to leave to see my parents in France I don’t know what the rules will be on coming back.

“I have participat­ed in British society, I have raised three intelligen­t lovely children, I have voted, I have worked, I am, I have been a citizen.”

Speaking in the Commons last week, Home Office minister Brandon Lewis reiterated an agreement with the EU on citizens’ rights is “within touching distance”.

A Home Office spokesman said: “Work is well under way to build a new applicatio­n system for settled status from scratch, with new processes, technology, rules and support for applicants,” the spokesman added.

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