I wasn’t fleeing from the country but my grandparents and they passed away before I decided to travel back and does that help me with the conditions since they ceased to exist
Assuming you are referring to the possible application of Subsection 108(1)(e) and 108(4) in IRPA . . . again, this gets into the technicalities about how these provisions are applied.
The thing about 108(1)(e) is that it is itself a separate ground for revoking or terminating the individual's protected person status. That is, if the underlying reason the person needed protected person status no longer exists, that is a separate ground for denying protected status or terminating the person's status as such . . . subject to the exception described in 108(4).
But as best I understand it, that does NOT change how 108(1)(a) can apply . . . that is, if 108(1)(a) applies because the individual has obtained a home country passport, or the person has traveled to the home country, or especially both, that is itself grounds for revoking or terminating the individual's protected person status.
That is, even though the reason you needed protected person status ceased, as of the death of the persons posing the threat, that would not have been grounds to terminate YOUR protected person status because of 108(4) . . . whereas under other circumstances, for other protected persons, if the threat they fled ceased, they would no longer be eligible for protected person status (separating one from the other is more complicated than I can explain).
So sure, you do not need to worry that Canada would proceed to terminate your status because of 108(1)(e). The fact your grandparents died, the threat ceased, and as a matter of fact you do not need special protection status, will NOT cause Canada to take action against your status.
BUT my understanding is that
does NOT preclude Canada from proceeding to terminate your status
based on 108(1)(a) (the reavailment provision).
BUT AGAIN I AM NO EXPERT and this is especially true about this. I got involved in this particular subject reluctantly, because I saw how it was unjustly affecting so many citizenship applicants and virtually no one (back when I started this topic) was warning refugees about this.
MY GUESS is that you are a person covered, and that 108(1)(a) could be applied to you. I do not know this for sure. But that is my guess.
In contrast, MY GUESS is that the risk that Canada will actually prosecute a reavailment against you appears to be low. BUT I REALLY DO
NOT KNOW. My guess is NO where near close enough for you to be making a decision based on it. Again, even a low risk demands exercising serious caution because the impact, the consequences, can potentially be so severe.
116sg17 said:
So technically once a person becomes citizen their PR status in revoked automatically. Travel to home country is considered reavailment and can only affect PR status of protected person. So unless a person had any sort of misrepresentation like errors in physical presence, undisclosed criminal cases, jail time, undisclosed travel history etc there citizenship cannot be challenged for just travelling to their home country.
That's about it.