In typical cases, yes. Because adoption usually happens at birth or early childhood and bond with the blood family ends there. My brother was adopted when he was 21yrs old. We grew up together like any other siblings. One of the main reasons for moving to Canada is my brother.Adoption typically severs the family tie from an immigration perspective. So I think it's quite possible CIC will not let you claim the points.
No - there is no email address. CIC has a call centre, however they are typically useless for all but the most basic questions:Is there an enquiries email ID where I can ask this to CIC directly please?
Very frustrating! How do I know what to do in my case? I don’t want to “apply and see” - if they reject I lose a lot of money!No - there is no email address. CIC has a call centre, however they are typically useless for all but the most basic questions:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/contact-ircc/client-support-centre.html
I personally would not claim sibling points. I think CIC will say the sibling relationship was severed as a result of the adoption.Very frustrating! How do I know what to do in my case? I don’t want to “apply and see” - if they reject I lose a lot of money!
As others have said, adoption severs the legal relationship with the birth family. Your brother's age at the time of adoption doesn't change that.In typical cases, yes. Because adoption usually happens at birth or early childhood and bond with the blood family ends there. My brother was adopted when he was 21yrs old. We grew up together like any other siblings. One of the main reasons for moving to Canada is my brother.
You said in https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/adopeted-out-sibling-points.534010/ "My biological brother was adopted by my aunt & uncle at birth."In typical cases, yes. Because adoption usually happens at birth or early childhood and bond with the blood family ends there. My brother was adopted when he was 21yrs old. We grew up together like any other siblings. One of the main reasons for moving to Canada is my brother.
He can't have been adopted at 21. If he had, CIC would not have recognized the adoption. Regardless of when he was adopted, I believe CIC will no longer recognize the sibling relationship as a result of the adoption.In typical cases, yes. Because adoption usually happens at birth or early childhood and bond with the blood family ends there. My brother was adopted when he was 21yrs old. We grew up together like any other siblings. One of the main reasons for moving to Canada is my brother.