Nicely written, but unfortunately not true. I was specifically asked if I intend to reside in Canada. The officer even asked me for my kids school registration for the upcoming semester and my job offer. So it not uncommon they ask. Just say YES if they ask (regardless of your intention) as you are meeting all the residency requirements (and intention to reside is not one of them)
The logic that one example means something is not uncommon is invalid. Third or fourth grade stuff as I recall.
I am not sure what you claim is not true about what I posted, but in regards to what you describe as your experience I explicitly noted that the official conducting a PI interview
can ask a citizenship applicant questions about future plans and intentions. So your experience is in no way inconsistent with or contrary to what I posted.
Moreover, you have not illuminated much (not even whether you were outside or in Canada during your interview, which as I noted is a factor that makes a big difference in terms of the likelihood of being asked questions about future plans and intentions, particularly as to plans to be in Canada or not) but based on what you have revealed about your experience, it appears your situation is not at all representative of the clearly qualified citizenship applicant with what is largely a problem-free application:
Just realized now going through old emails looking for other stuff. I had a time buffer but even with that Im short 12 days.
That is, your experience does not appear to be an example of what
@rar666 might anticipate. Not an example anywhere near sufficient to support conclusions about the standard questions asked during a routine Program Integrity (PI) interview of adult citizenship applicants.
Moreover, by the way, there is no indication that
@rar666 will be outside Canada for the interview, so the likelihood of questions about where they intend to reside is remote. Leading to . . .
As noted, it is not clear what you claim "
is not true" in what I posted, but if you are claiming that it is not true that the post by
@naseryas is misinformation, no, that is not correct.
They will ask many questions about wither you actually "intend to reside in Canada".
@naseryas does not state that the interviewer
might ask some questions about intent to reside in Canada, but that the interviewer "
will ask many questions about" intent to reside in Canada. This is
NOT anywhere near true. Even if, as you claim, it is "
not uncommon" for such questions to be asked, and even if such questions are commonly asked of applicants outside Canada at the time of the interview, among the scores and scores of credible anecdotal reports about their interview, for all citizenship applicants, at the very most there is no indication that any more than a FEW are being asked such questions, and that few are almost all outside Canada. Absolutely NOT every applicant. So to say such questions "
will" be asked is on its face NOT true, not close, not anywhere near close.
Which demands being called out here because of the serious, egregiously malicious directive both you and @naseryas then propound, telling citizenship applicants to lie to IRCC. To my view this is close enough to encouraging the commission of fraud that it should not be allowed here.
In any event, a summary of what I posted regarding the prospect of so-called "
intent to reside" PI interview questioning:
-- most applicants, those IN Canada at the time of the interview, are NOT likely to be asked any questions about future plans or intentions; that said
-- -- questions about future plans or intentions, including as to intent to reside, can be asked; applicants should ALWAYS be HONEST
-- applicants who are located outside Canada at the time of the interview, and especially those who are or who appear to have relocated abroad or otherwise abroad for an extended time, MIGHT be asked about WHEN they will return to Canada, and related questions, and again they should be honest, they absolutely should be HONEST; recognizing . . .
-- -- being outside Canada after applying, and an intent to reside outside Canada, are not disqualifying, not a prohibition, so will not have an effect on the outcome; they might trigger increased scrutiny but the qualified applicant will still be granted citizenship, just might take a little longer and, for now still, all applicants must be in Canada when they take the oath