I am a Canadian citizen and am trying to assist my girlfriend of three years in the Philippines in coming for a 3-4 week visit so she can finally meet my family and see where I grew up. We tried applying for a visitor visa (which we are told has to be a temporary residence visa) and were denied back in July of 2017 much to our shock. We never guessed this would be so difficult for just a tourism venture.
The application returned the following from the embassy in Manila (ONLY the RED was grounds for refusal):
Following an examination of your application, I am not satisfied that you application meets the requirements of
the Act and the Regulations for the reasons explained below. Please note that only the grounds that are checked
off apply to the refusal of your application.
You have not satisfied me that you would leave Canada at the end of your stay as a temporary
resident. In reaching this decision, I considered several factors, including:
-travel history
-immigration status in country of residence
-Family ties in Canada and in country of residence
-Length of proposed stay in Canada
-Purpose of visit
-Employment prospects in country of residence
-Current employment situation
-Personal assets and financial status
-Having a legitimate business purpose in Canada
-any history of contravening the conditions of admission on a previous stay in Canada.
-I am not satisfied that you have sufficient funds, including income or assets, to carry out your stated
purpose in going to Canada or to maintain yourself while in Canada and to effect your departure.
-You have not provided sufficient documentation to support your / your host's income and assets.
-You have made an application for a temporary resident visa in the transit visitor category. As you are
planning to remain in Canada longer than 48 hours, you do not meet the requirements of this
category. You must make an application for a temporary resident visa in the visitor category and pay
the associated cost recovery fees.
-You have submitted documentation which lacks authenticity as part of your application. This has
diminished the overall credibility of your submission.
-I am not satisfied that you have answered all questions truthfully, as required by subsection 16(1) of
the Act. Specifically, I am not satisfied that the following information is truthful:
etc.
My girlfriend is scared that a second application being refused might seriously harm any attempts at immigration in the future should we wish to pursue this avenue let alone being allowed to simply visit at all.
Point One: We have taken steps to mitigate the concerns the immigration officer has pointed out. My girlfriend had no previous travel experience outside her country but plenty within. Since the date of refusal she has now completed a five day trip to Hong Kong as a tourist and later a six countries in six days Southeast Asia Tour (DIY ASEAN Tour) as part of a 3-part "Spartan" marathon visiting Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam Thailand and Cambodia.
As to the second and third points:
Included in the application was the following:
-History of our relationship (communications logs, gift receipts, etc) going back nearly three years.
-Detailed Trip Itenerary
-Parks Canada 150th Pass (for tourism and camping discounts)
-Personal Earnings Statements, Bank Account Balances, Savings & Investments Statements, etc (from us both)
-Multiple Identification Documents (from both of us) passport, licenses, etc.
-Purpose of Travel Letter
-Family Information in the Philippines
-Visa Invitation Letter (documenting my intent to sponsor her trip)
-Canadian Lawyer Notarized Letter (legally saying I would be sponsoring her expenses while in Canada)
-Letter from her employment company stating her approved vacation time, return to work date, several meetings, projects, and training dates, etc that she would be attending to upon return and their dates, etc.
-Letter from her employer stating her work history, recent promotions, etc.
-Copies of airfare tickets between her place of residence in the Philippines and her family home dated shortly post trip.
-Copies of receipts for being entered in mountain climbing and marathon events, post trip, back in the Philippines.
Point Two: There is little else we can think of that she could have received as supporting documents from her employer to remove any concerns. The immigration officer though states "NO EVIDENCE OF EMPLOYMENT / INCOME, MODEST PERSONAL SAVINGS" yet on the other hand clearly lists her as being "Employed: (Her Company Name and Position)" There workers do have signed contracts for which hers was up in a year (well past the trips allotted time) but she had just received several promotions and had a lot of projects and work listed that she was returning too.
Point Three: It is true she does not a have many physical assets (car, home) and has been renting apartments for some time, however her dream is to eventually immigrate elsewhere (not necessarily Canada) and tying up money or getting into a long term housing contract does not make things easier to achieve that. Does she really have to buy a house just to be able to come to Canada as even an occasional tourist? In terms of finances I legally said I would be covering the entirety of her expenses for the stay. I definitely have the means to cover a stay much much longer than 3-4 weeks. Now, I could have placed the saved funds into her accounts but would that really make a difference in her financial status? Wouldn't they just see this as having been just transferred in anyway?
We did apply through the ACCESS TO INFORMATION AND PERSONAL INFORMATION (ATIP) Act to get the records and
the electronic notes of the immigration or citizenship officer(s) for her temporary residence file application.
The file we received is very cryptic and doesn't really seem to elaborate any more than what we had already deduced.
Seeking advice...
The application returned the following from the embassy in Manila (ONLY the RED was grounds for refusal):
Following an examination of your application, I am not satisfied that you application meets the requirements of
the Act and the Regulations for the reasons explained below. Please note that only the grounds that are checked
off apply to the refusal of your application.
You have not satisfied me that you would leave Canada at the end of your stay as a temporary
resident. In reaching this decision, I considered several factors, including:
-travel history
-immigration status in country of residence
-Family ties in Canada and in country of residence
-Length of proposed stay in Canada
-Purpose of visit
-Employment prospects in country of residence
-Current employment situation
-Personal assets and financial status
-Having a legitimate business purpose in Canada
-any history of contravening the conditions of admission on a previous stay in Canada.
-I am not satisfied that you have sufficient funds, including income or assets, to carry out your stated
purpose in going to Canada or to maintain yourself while in Canada and to effect your departure.
-You have not provided sufficient documentation to support your / your host's income and assets.
-You have made an application for a temporary resident visa in the transit visitor category. As you are
planning to remain in Canada longer than 48 hours, you do not meet the requirements of this
category. You must make an application for a temporary resident visa in the visitor category and pay
the associated cost recovery fees.
-You have submitted documentation which lacks authenticity as part of your application. This has
diminished the overall credibility of your submission.
-I am not satisfied that you have answered all questions truthfully, as required by subsection 16(1) of
the Act. Specifically, I am not satisfied that the following information is truthful:
etc.
My girlfriend is scared that a second application being refused might seriously harm any attempts at immigration in the future should we wish to pursue this avenue let alone being allowed to simply visit at all.
Point One: We have taken steps to mitigate the concerns the immigration officer has pointed out. My girlfriend had no previous travel experience outside her country but plenty within. Since the date of refusal she has now completed a five day trip to Hong Kong as a tourist and later a six countries in six days Southeast Asia Tour (DIY ASEAN Tour) as part of a 3-part "Spartan" marathon visiting Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam Thailand and Cambodia.
As to the second and third points:
Included in the application was the following:
-History of our relationship (communications logs, gift receipts, etc) going back nearly three years.
-Detailed Trip Itenerary
-Parks Canada 150th Pass (for tourism and camping discounts)
-Personal Earnings Statements, Bank Account Balances, Savings & Investments Statements, etc (from us both)
-Multiple Identification Documents (from both of us) passport, licenses, etc.
-Purpose of Travel Letter
-Family Information in the Philippines
-Visa Invitation Letter (documenting my intent to sponsor her trip)
-Canadian Lawyer Notarized Letter (legally saying I would be sponsoring her expenses while in Canada)
-Letter from her employment company stating her approved vacation time, return to work date, several meetings, projects, and training dates, etc that she would be attending to upon return and their dates, etc.
-Letter from her employer stating her work history, recent promotions, etc.
-Copies of airfare tickets between her place of residence in the Philippines and her family home dated shortly post trip.
-Copies of receipts for being entered in mountain climbing and marathon events, post trip, back in the Philippines.
Point Two: There is little else we can think of that she could have received as supporting documents from her employer to remove any concerns. The immigration officer though states "NO EVIDENCE OF EMPLOYMENT / INCOME, MODEST PERSONAL SAVINGS" yet on the other hand clearly lists her as being "Employed: (Her Company Name and Position)" There workers do have signed contracts for which hers was up in a year (well past the trips allotted time) but she had just received several promotions and had a lot of projects and work listed that she was returning too.
Point Three: It is true she does not a have many physical assets (car, home) and has been renting apartments for some time, however her dream is to eventually immigrate elsewhere (not necessarily Canada) and tying up money or getting into a long term housing contract does not make things easier to achieve that. Does she really have to buy a house just to be able to come to Canada as even an occasional tourist? In terms of finances I legally said I would be covering the entirety of her expenses for the stay. I definitely have the means to cover a stay much much longer than 3-4 weeks. Now, I could have placed the saved funds into her accounts but would that really make a difference in her financial status? Wouldn't they just see this as having been just transferred in anyway?
We did apply through the ACCESS TO INFORMATION AND PERSONAL INFORMATION (ATIP) Act to get the records and
the electronic notes of the immigration or citizenship officer(s) for her temporary residence file application.
The file we received is very cryptic and doesn't really seem to elaborate any more than what we had already deduced.
Seeking advice...
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