Hi. is it ok to have my conjugal partner sign the forms in her country and scan and copy them and send them to me or do the forms need to be signed by her in ink and have the original sent by post to me. whats the difference?
Have to be signed with a wet signature (by hand).Hi. is it ok to have my conjugal partner sign the forms in her country and scan and copy them and send them to me or do the forms need to be signed by her in ink and have the original sent by post to me. whats the difference?
Also are you sure that you have read into applying conjugal enough? Its a very tough class to actually apply and be approved in.Hi. is it ok to have my conjugal partner sign the forms in her country and scan and copy them and send them to me or do the forms need to be signed by her in ink and have the original sent by post to me. whats the difference?
What is your barrier to becoming married or common-law with your partner?Hi. is it ok to have my conjugal partner sign the forms in her country and scan and copy them and send them to me or do the forms need to be signed by her in ink and have the original sent by post to me. whats the difference?
Thanks for your response man. I am referring to try to get a divorce through the Canadian system as I was married to a Canadian woman. If this were most other countries we would probably be divorced. It takes forever. Also the consultant I was using also used a cover letter citing humanitarian and compassionate notes because my girlfriend doesn't live in the safest part of Ukraine ( it borders Russia where there is a civil conflict and our boy is being raised without his dad)You can always get divorced from your spouse using the Canadian system, you don't need to use system from your home country.
Then you would be free to get married to your current partner in some other country even if your home country doesn't accept the divorce.
IRCC may accept your reasons to approve a conjugal app, or they may state you need to go through the legal divorce process first and only apply when you can get married. Or if you have a passport from home country still, they may think you should live there 12 months to become common-law. So while a conjugal app has a chance to succeed, you should know it's still very risky.
Unfortunately those reasons will probably not be accepted. Your girlfriend and child could move to another area of the Ukraine and we have seen many cases where a parent has been separated from a child. I would expect normal processing time and I also think that filing under conjugal is a big risk. The slow pace of your divorce does not mean you can't get married it just means your marriage will be delayed. Many Canadian divorces don't take that long. All depends on whether both parties are willing to compromise and move on.Thanks for your response man. I am referring to try to get a divorce through the Canadian system as I was married to a Canadian woman. If this were most other countries we would probably be divorced. It takes forever. Also the consultant I was using also used a cover letter citing humanitarian and compassionate notes because my girlfriend doesn't live in the safest part of Ukraine ( it borders Russia where there is a civil conflict and our boy is being raised without his dad)
Unfortunately those reasons will probably not be accepted. Your girlfriend and child could move to another area of the Ukraine and we have seen many cases where a parent has been separated from a child. I would expect normal processing time and I also think that filing under conjugal is a big risk. The slow pace of your divorce does not mean you can't get married it just means your marriage will be delayed. Many Canadian divorces don't take that long. All depends on whether both parties are willing to compromise and move on.
Firstly thanks for the response. i have been told by an immigration lawyer and 2 iccrc consultant that for reasons i mentioned above constitutes a legal barrier, additionally cic cant force you to be married an the undertaking for sponsorship is the same for married couples so whats the difference? A parent being separated from a child is less than ideal and he is Canadian. If she was granted the trv we would be applying inland, After I get my AOR and or UCI number were under advisement apply forUnfortunately those reasons will probably not be accepted. Your girlfriend and child could move to another area of the Ukraine and we have seen many cases where a parent has been separated from a child. I would expect normal processing time and I also think that filing under conjugal is a big risk. The slow pace of your divorce does not mean you can't get married it just means your marriage will be delayed. Many Canadian divorces don't take that long. All depends on whether both parties are willing to compromise and move on.
Right they can't force you to get married, However the manuals are very clear that if a couple is not married, they must be common-law. And if they can't become common-law, then conjugal is only an option if marriage is legally impossible to do.Firstly thanks for the response. i have been told by an immigration lawyer and 2 iccrc consultant that for reasons i mentioned above constitutes a legal barrier, additionally cic cant force you to be married an the undertaking for sponsorship is the same for married couples so whats the difference?
Actually the conjugal class of app does not exist for inland. Since someone already inside Canada, would have no barrier to marriage or common-law. So if she got a TRV approved, if your divorce process was still very delayed you would need to live with her 1 continuous year before being eligible to apply inland.If she was granted the trv we would be applying inland,
12/10/2017Right they can't force you to get married, However the manuals are very clear that if a couple is not married, they must be common-law. And if they can't become common-law, then conjugal is only an option if marriage is legally impossible to do.
So the only question in your case is if the visa officer will consider your reasons for not getting divorce, as a legal barrier. What we are saying is that since spouses in Canada get divorced all the time, there is actually no legal barrier, it will simply take time to finalize.
The visa officer processing your app will use their own discretion in determining your reasons for applying conjugal. Yes they will consider any evidence you submit including H&C reasons, but it's completely up to them if those H&C reasons will help get your conjugal app accepted. H&C reasons don't necessarily make up the legal/immigration reasons for not waiting to get married or becoming common-law. So in other words, you need to really hope you get a compassionate and lenient visa officer!
Actually the conjugal class of app does not exist for inland. Since someone already inside Canada, would have no barrier to marriage or common-law. So if she got a TRV approved, if your divorce process was still very delayed you would need to live with her 1 continuous year before being eligible to apply inland.
From the OP manuals: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/manuals/op/op02-eng.pdf
"The conjugal partner category applies only to the family class and only to a foreign national sponsored by a Canadian citizen or permanent resident living in Canada. This category does not apply to the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class as the exception would not be required in Canada."
Don't think there is much more you can add. As many have stated, there is a good chance the visa officer may still decide an extended divorce process in Canada doesn't warrant a true legal barrier that would allow you to qualify for a conjugal app. However the visa officer can use their own discretion and you really need to hope you get a nicer more compassionate officer.That is my explaination to the imm Officer. Is there anything that I forgot to add to make this explanation stronger?
Thanks a lot for all your feedback, its super appreciated
Thanks!.Don't think there is much more you can add. As many have stated, there is a good chance the visa officer may still decide an extended divorce process in Canada doesn't warrant a true legal barrier that would allow you to qualify for a conjugal app. However the visa officer can use their own discretion and you really need to hope you get a nicer more compassionate officer.
I have seen several cases on this forum that I thought had no chances of success, end up being approved.
Just make sure you have a back-up plan in the worst case scenario that the app is rejected. You would need to decide if you wanted to appeal and try your H&C reasons with an appeals board, or wait until you can get married/common-law and try again.
You had mentioned she was already refused for a visitor visa once, so unless her situation has changed (i.e. more international travel, more ties to home country, etc), applying for another one would most likely just end in refusal again. Although I've heard some people do try a few times and are eventually successful. Especially if you tell them she intends to stay in Canada long term, that will practically guarantee the rejection. One should never mention in a TRV app they intend to stay more than a few months.Thanks!.
I've noticed that i can apply for a visitor visa for longer than 6 months and online. Would it be more advisable for us to use this strategy rather than the conjugal. Should we be forthright and transparent in our intentions?