2. I will meet with Lawyer soon and go over my options
Good idea.
In fact, recent queries and observations here induced me to revisit known cases and information, and attempt some further research, and unfortunately it is very, very difficult to discern much at all about how IRCC or CBSA are CURRENTLY approaching potential reavailment situations.
I HAVE HOWEVER CHANGED MY VIEW SOME: And, in particular, I would strongly urge anyone who has applied for citizenship AND who has (1) obtained home country passport, AND (2) traveled to the home country (especially more than once), to FIND and CONSULT WITH A LAWYER, with a qualified lawyer experienced in refugee matters.
Unfortunately, it appears more than a few lawyers, even those engaged in refugee practices, may not be entirely up-to-speed with the cessation issue. So it remains imperative to, in effect, interview prospective lawyers about how well acquainted they are with the 2012 change in the law which subjects PR-refugees to automatic loss of PR status if there is a cessation of their refugee or protected person status, including (especially) PR-refugees who have applied for citizenship.
BUT, on the other hand, an individual's best source of information about how IRCC is approaching this issue will be an immigration lawyer well-acquainted with refugee cases. If the lawyer is in fact well-acquainted with the issue.
Updated Statistics:
Since
@Saaqs linked, back in mid-October 2017, the page with cessation statistics, those statistics have been updated (as I was recently informed by a helpful participant here).
See
http://www.irb-cisr.gc.ca/Eng/RefClaDem/stats/Pages/RPDVacStat.aspx
The most salient statistic brought to my attention is that in 2017 there were 172 section 108(2) cessation applications commenced, way more than the number commenced in 2016 (94), and approaching the number commenced during the last year of the Harper era purge (180 in 2015).
The number of applications resulting in cessation remains relatively low (a total of just 30 for all of 2016 and 2017), but it is nonetheless the number of new applications which suggests cause for concern.
Moreover, the number of new applications in the first six months of 2017 was 81, meaning ten more (91) were commenced in the second half of the year, which could be merely incidental or it could be that as the year went on IRCC and/or CBSA were escalating enforcement.
Note that of the more than 70 or so cessation cases that have resulted in cessation orders in the last three years, barely a few of these show up in published decisions.
The dearth of published decisions profoundly limits our access to information about how IRCC or CBSA are approaching the reavailment or cessation issue. If anyone knows if RPD decisions are at all publicly accessible, please provide some information or links. There are a few IAD decisions. Some information is redacted in those decisions. They are all titled "In Re X" or "X (In re)" for example. But overall, there are very, very few published decisions since the Liberals formed the government. So we are very much in the dark about actual policies and practices . . . other than it is apparent that the current government continues to initiate cessation proceedings. We just do not know when or why or what criteria is employed in making the decision to do so.
Revisiting some published decisions:
There is one very recent Federal Court decision, and it favoured the PR-Refugee. This might be to some extent re-assuring, except it reflects that both the government (the current Liberal government) and the RPD approached this individual case seeking to terminate this individual's status in Canada . . . noting that the case has not yet been won, that it is remanded back to the RPD (Refugee Protection Division) to be decided again by a different member.
See this case here:
http://canlii.ca/t/hqf5v
Otherwise, what cases can be readily accessed suggest that the combination of (1) obtaining home country passport, and (2) traveling to the home country, tends to be far more risky than I have apprehended.
In particular, it appears that IRCC, CBSA, the RPD, and IAD agree that in addition to the presumption of reavailment, the combination of obtaining home country passport plus traveling to the home country ESTABLISHES the INTENTION TO REAVAIL ONESELF of home country protection, and thus the only question then is whether the PR's actions were voluntary or compelled. One case, for example, concluded a single visit to the home country to visit a parent who was apparently about to die, by a young refugee who was suffering anxiety about never seeing his father again and who took precautions to avoid the dangers he fled from, did not support cessation, that in effect this individual (given his age and other factors) was in effect compelled to visit the home country. That seems like a rather high bar.
For this case, see
http://canlii.ca/t/gf86d
While this latter case is actually several years old now, and perhaps a single visit to the home country will NOT trigger an investigation and commencement of cessation proceedings, the general principle appears to be the dominant position held by the government: that the combination of obtaining the home country passport and traveling to the home country, does not merely raise the presumption of reavailment, but is sufficient to establish an intention to reavail oneself of home country protection . . . leaving only a defense of compulsion, an argument that the return to the home country was, in effect, under duress and not really volunatary.
Obtaining home country passport alone:
A couple months ago there was some discussion about the impact of just obtaining the home country passport. With the caveat that I am no expert, my recent revisiting of the research tends to confirm, as far as I can discern, this alone is NOT likely to be particularly problematic. Under the UNHCR guidelines, obtaining the home country passport is sufficient to raise the presumption of reavailment, but if it has NOT been used, the decisions suggest that this presumption is readily rebutted and may be rebutted by little more than the fact of not using it and affirming it was not intended to reavail oneself of home country protection. Again, however, it needs to be emphasized that I am NO expert, and that, after all, just obtaining the home country passport does raise the presumption of reavailment.
Additional sources for consideration (with some repeats)
:
Mayell 2018 FC 139
http://canlii.ca/t/hqf5v
XXX 2014 CanLII 66627
http://canlii.ca/t/gf86d
Xin Li Yuan
http://canlii.ca/t/gkfq5
X (Re), 2016 CanLII 105329 (CA IRB)
http://canlii.ca/t/h4n6s
three trips to Pakistan
Maqbool 2016 FC 1146
http://canlii.ca/t/gv6gq
Bermudez, [2017] 1 FCR 128, 2016 FCA 131
http://canlii.ca/t/gr714
Key ruling in Bermudez: Hearings Officer does not have discretion to address H&C considerations in making a cessation application
Abadi, 2016 FC 29
http://canlii.ca/t/gn0cx
Nilam, 2017 FCA 44
http://canlii.ca/t/h1s6l
Key ruling: yes, Minister may suspend processing citizenship application pending cessation proceedings (set aside mandamus granted by FC Justice Russell
http://canlii.ca/t/gstsh ); also see
http://canlii.ca/t/gllrk in which FC Justice Mactavish granted Minister's appeal of RPD decision which dismissed cessation application
Cerna 2015 FC 1074
http://canlii.ca/t/gl76g