Hi friends, I have come up with a strange question regarding removal orders. (It hasn't happened to me, nor do I know anyone in this situation, but given the unpredictable behavior of IRCC, I fear that eventually, this situation may come up somehow.)
I have read that when a PR tries to enter Canada, he/she cannot be stopped from doing so, but an officer at the border may check RO. And if the officer thinks RO is not met, a report will be sent to the minister. If the minister agrees with the report, a removal order will be issued. So it seems that the removal order is not immediately issued at the border. Is that indeed the case? Is there a gap between the report and the removal order? How long is that gap?
The reason that I am asking is:
I read that if a PR is under a removal order, he/she cannot become a citizen. Now imagine this situation: a PR submits a citizenship application with the hope that it can be processed in a year. He/she then leaves Canada, and unluckily, IRCC delayed the application for years (which is not impossible). By the time of Decision Made, this person still meets RO, but by the time he/she receives oath invite, another, say, 5 years passed...
This person hasn't traveled back to Canada in these 5 years, so no one checked RO, and PR is not lost. Now right before the oath date, this person tries to enter Canada in a private vehicle for the oath. If the removal order is immediate, this plan would not work, because the order comes before oath for sure; but if it is not, then he/she can enter Canada, become a citizen, and when the minister sees and approves the report, theoretically no removal order can be issued since he/she is already a citizen.
I know this sounds very bizarre and looks like a way to sneak past the regulation, but if an action is not prohibited, then one should not get legally penalized for it.
I have read that when a PR tries to enter Canada, he/she cannot be stopped from doing so, but an officer at the border may check RO. And if the officer thinks RO is not met, a report will be sent to the minister. If the minister agrees with the report, a removal order will be issued. So it seems that the removal order is not immediately issued at the border. Is that indeed the case? Is there a gap between the report and the removal order? How long is that gap?
The reason that I am asking is:
I read that if a PR is under a removal order, he/she cannot become a citizen. Now imagine this situation: a PR submits a citizenship application with the hope that it can be processed in a year. He/she then leaves Canada, and unluckily, IRCC delayed the application for years (which is not impossible). By the time of Decision Made, this person still meets RO, but by the time he/she receives oath invite, another, say, 5 years passed...
This person hasn't traveled back to Canada in these 5 years, so no one checked RO, and PR is not lost. Now right before the oath date, this person tries to enter Canada in a private vehicle for the oath. If the removal order is immediate, this plan would not work, because the order comes before oath for sure; but if it is not, then he/she can enter Canada, become a citizen, and when the minister sees and approves the report, theoretically no removal order can be issued since he/she is already a citizen.
I know this sounds very bizarre and looks like a way to sneak past the regulation, but if an action is not prohibited, then one should not get legally penalized for it.