Appreciate your feedback. One question though since you mentioned h&c relief granted to some PRs to keep their PR status. Is there a possibility of any provision for h&c relief in granting citizenship while a PR is posted abroad with UN and there are multiple other factors involved such as PR being highly qualified in a licensed trade not able to obtain meaningful employment in Canada due to foreign credentials, living on lowest income band as demonstrated by previous tax returns and PRs family staying behind in Canada while is posted abroad living alone, can it be considered as hardship and together with all these factors is there any room for h&c relief for granting the citizenship in your opinion? Another factor that PR makes sure that their PR RO is fulfilled at the time of citizenship application
For adults, there is no flexibility in the physical presence requirement for a grant of citizenship under Section 5(1) in the Citizenship Act. One day short, the application must be denied. The only waiver of the requirement respecting length of physical presence, that is available, is in the case of a minor. See Section 5(3) in the Citizenship Act, which details the scope of the Minister's authority to waive requirements "
on compassionate grounds". That can be read here:
https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-29/page-2.html#docCont
There is a provision which allows the Minister, in "
special cases," to grant citizenship "
to reward services of an exceptional value to Canada." This is Section 5(4) in the Citizenship Act. All indications are this is indeed a rare exception, a very rare exception. Best guess is that short of being in the range of doing, or at least approaching Nobel prize worthy work, the odds are overwhelmingly not good.
I confess, though, I tend to dodge the hard questions. I cannot offer much beyond sorting out what the rules are, and figuring out what we can about how they are applied, how they work, generally. Getting this stuff right can be difficult enough in an open forum like this.
What is possible at the fringes goes into hard questions subject to lots and lots of if-this, then-that, but if-that, then-that-other-that, swimming in all sorts of maybe-this, maybe that, subject to a whole lot of uncertain contingencies. There are some forum participants who go there. Frankly, that input tends to not be helpful.
Based on a recent Federal Court decision (citation is not at my fingerprints) I understand that a 5(1) application cannot be converted into a 5(4) application. Which means to qualify for a 5(4) grant of citizenship, an individual must specifically make a 5(4) application. I recently searched for a form to make a 5(4) application (just academic research) and could find none. In addition to the 5(1) application and the 5(2) application (for a minor), which are the applications most people are talking about when talking about citizenship applications, I could find the form for making a 5(5) application (for certain stateless persons), but again none for making a 5(4) application (for a grant of citizenship to reward exceptional service). This, I'd suggest, is probably a clue, perhaps a big clue.
So possible, maybe, but likely a possibility much closer to impossible than it is to probable. By a lot I'd guess.
Regarding the PR Residency Obligation:
First, in regards to a PR with a citizenship application in process: yes, a failure to meet the PR RO can be grounds for IRCC to suspend processing a citizenship application pending a final determination as to the PR's admissibility; moreover, if the PR is issued a Removal Order while a citizenship application is pending, IRCC can deny the citizenship application (even though it is possible the PR could win an appeal and the Removal Order be set aside).
Secondly, if you are outside Canada more than 1095 days after the date of landing, within any five year period, there is a real risk of losing PR status despite how worthy or valuable the service at the UN is. Relying on H&C relief is always a gamble.
Frankly, before relying on H&C relief in regards to the PR Residency Obligation it would be prudent to consult with a lawyer AND get a second opinion from another lawyer . . . despite the favourable outcomes for the PRs in D'Almeida v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2019 CanLII 106794,
https://canlii.ca/t/j3bcl and in Vaah v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2022 CanLII 35872,
https://canlii.ca/t/jp29q It is warrants remembering that both D'Almeida and Vaah were issued Removal Orders and in order to save their PR status, both paid for lawyers to represent them in their appeals, and I am guessing those lawyers did not come cheap. Meanwhile there are other PRs for whom things did not go their way in their appeal. Relying on H&C relief is a gamble.
Sometimes life forces us to make really, really tough decisions . . . which of course are for each of to make based on our own best judgment in due consideration of our situations and priorities and preferences. I wish you well in your effort to navigate through this.