This post is following the misrepresentation/fraud tangent further off topic, but there a couple recent Federal Court decisions worth discussing, decisions which clarify the scope and forever-tainted aspect of misrepresentations made at earlier stages of an immigrant's path to PR and citizenship; these are NOT refugee cases, but the general principles apply for any path to PR and then citizenship.
Because of this off-topic tangent, it is probably best to first be clear about the OP's situation.
So as I understand I can freely go back home for visit and come back to Canada without any problem? Even I was refugee right?
As I previously stated, and it should be obvious, whether it is OK to travel to your home country is foremost about whether it is safe to do so, about what the risks are.
Beyond that, again, there is NO risk of losing Canadian citizenship for actions which might be deemed reavailment under the UNHCR guidelines. (You have availed yourself of Canadian protection as a Canadian citizen, so reavailment of another country's protection is irrelevant now.)
To be clear, however, there is never any guarantee someone can travel "without any problem." Stuff happens. Even false criminal accusations. Lost travel documents. Way too many potential problems lurking in any international travel, for anyone, to categorically say a person can go and come back to Canada "without any problem."
It can be stated, however, that the fact of having originally immigrated to Canada as a refugee, that does not preclude your capacity to legally travel to your home country once you are a Canadian citizen, so far as Canadian law and rules apply. (Obviously the destination country determines who can travel to or in that country.)
The fraud or misrepresentation tangent:
There is nothing in what the OP has reported which in any way suggests a discussion about fraud is relevant to the OP's situation. Merely traveling to the home country after becoming a Canadian citizen is NOT evidence of having committed fraud.
Fraud or misrepresentation is only an issue if there was in fact some fraud committed, whether in the process of applying for and becoming a refugee, or in the process of applying for and becoming a PR, or in the process of applying for and becoming a citizen.
Note: a material misrepresentation or fraud in the application for citizenship itself, in the process of applying for citizenship itself, is grounds for revoking citizenship. This alone is not grounds for terminating PR status. Example: citizenship applicant misrepresents place of actual residence or amount of presence in Canada in the citizenship application. That is fraud which can result in loss of citizenship, whereupon the individual reverts to PR status.
Misrepresentation in the process of becoming a PR (including in becoming a refugee who becomes a PR), however, is grounds for revoking citizenship and PR status and can lead to deportation.
Which brings me to one of the more recent cases of misrepresentation: Vujicic, 2018 FC 116
http://canlii.ca/t/hqbl7
In this case, the court succinctly states what I so much more clumsily attempted to say in a previous post:
"There is no suggestion that Mr Vujicic made any false claim in his citizenship application; the Minister’s allegations relate solely to Mr Vujicic’s application for permanent residence (which is a sufficient basis on which to conclude that his citizenship was wrongly acquired; see s 10(2))."
The case involves a lot of collateral issues, probably more of interest to a jurist junkie like me (but some of these issues, like the admissibility of CAIPS notes, and response to Vujicic's claims about not understanding the import of the decision in a court case, are illuminating and instructive), but the decision makes this particular principle clear: a misrepresentation made in a PR application many years previous is a basis for revoking citizenship.
The other recent misrepresentation case which warrants some attention is one which has become a big media story, regarding a man who applied for and obtained PR status while he was on parole for a murder conviction (
this should link to CBC story) in a high profile honour-killing case. While that conviction was later set aside, obviously he made a material misrepresentation at the time he became a PR.
His PR status is not the subject of the Federal Court decision. He is abroad and unless and until he applies for a PR Travel Document, or attempts to return to Canada, there is no proceeding in which to determine his inadmissibility based on the misrepresentation. He in effect remains a PR but will likely lose PR status if he attempts to come to Canada.
The Federal Court decision, rather, is about whether one of his sons, an accompanying dependent at the time the father applied for and became a Canadian PR, is also inadmissible
FOR MISREPRESENTATION and should lose PR status. Despite the fact that as an accompanying dependent the son was never asked if any other family member or his father had any criminal charges or convictions. This case depends on the meaning and scope of what constitutes indirectly making a misrepresentation of material fact.
The court stated the issues this way:
"This application for judicial review raises questions about the responsibility of an applicant for permanent residence in Canada to disclose what they know about another family member’s criminal history. Are they inadmissible for indirectly representing a material fact if they are landed as the dependent of the principal applicant who lied about his criminal record? Do they have a duty of candour to disclose their knowledge of that fact?"
Spoiler alert: Maybe.
See Singh Sidhu, 2018 FC 306 here:
http://canlii.ca/t/hr34q
or here
https://decisions.fct-cf.gc.ca/fc-cf/decisions/en/item/307392/index.do
The case has been sent back to be decided by a different IAD panel. A question has been certified for further review by a higher court.
Obviously, the dependent son's age at the time (mid-20s by the time of the landing interview) is a factor. I cannot guess what the ultimate outcome will be. Obviously IRCC is pursuing the matter aggressively, zealously. I'd say "we will see," but many times these cases do not result in a publicly disclosed outcome.
A Separate Important Lesson:
Both of these cases illustrate that many, many factors and circumstances can influence the ultimate outcome. It is one thing to recognize that failing to disclose a material fact, like being convicted of murder, can constitute a material misrepresentation which will forever be a ground to revoke citizenship and/or terminate PR status. But "can" is not the same as "will." What
will happen in the particular case is a lot more complicated, and subject to all sorts of
It-Depends factors.
There is a reason for avoiding definitive declarations about how this or that will affect what happens. There are almost always many other factors which can lead to variations in what actually will happen.