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Hi there, I can't imagine what you've been thru, it's not really that bad but I can feel your frustration.
I do hope that your husband will be able proove his genuine love for you since on this case he will be the one in question. Good luck to you!
 
Excellent reasons for immigration to Canada! Make sure you and your husband explain all of this clearly in your application. Bodes well towards genuineness.

Next time someone b*tches about Canada's immigration system and laws (including myself :-o) I'm sending them to this thread!
 
Just out of curiosity....any idea how an IO would respond to this?

Ages - Me 46, Her 48 , Me - US, Her - Canadian - divorced from previous marriage since 2/2000 (finalized 2/2003).
Dating - since 9/2001, engaged 5/2002, married 5/2009

Previous app (me - FSW) - 4/2008, sent back with a refund due to change in NOC codes and their importance in the new application process.

My wife is getting increasingly nervous about the fact that it looks suspisious even though we were advised to do the FSW app first before we decided to get married. Thats why it was so long between the engagement and the wedding ceremony.
 
It might warrant and extra look by the VO but if you've solidly proven your relationship, shouldn't be an issue. Spousal sponsorships are all about genuineness. Prove it and you are good to go assuming all of the other criteria has been met.
 
I was reading this thread and I have some to add :)

My husband is also Cuban and I am all too familiar with Cuban politics and laws. I was VERY surprised to hear that your 30 year old husband only found out about Cuban law regarding living/staying with a Cuban family after they threatened him with jailtime. The laws surrounding Cubans and foreigners are very widespread and commonly known in Cuba. From when my husband and first I met and during my several trips to the island he made it very clear that we could only stay in a Casa Particular (rental houses that have been authorized by the Cuban government to rent to foreigners) and that we needed to be very careful with the authorities because of this. Cuban law prohibits Cubans from mingling/covorting/ speaking to a tourist (unless your job requires it i.e. for those working in a hotel).

I think there are 2 main reasons neither of your lawyers nor employees at the Consular Offices mentioned these laws when you got married:

1) they most probably well assumed that at lest your husband knew the legalities (as I said it is widespread throughout the island and everyone I know there is aware), and
2) because a marriage between a Cuban and a "foreigner" is not illegal. The marriage process is perfectly legal and Cuban authorities cannot prohibit this.

I think you were robbed of $3,000.00 as the paperwork for the marriage process does not require this much money.

All this being said, the Canadian embassy in Havana does tend to scrutinize applications for couples that do have an significant age difference. I don't want to come off as negative nor discourage you but I know several cases (where the wife is sponsoring their Cuban husband) where the PR was refused. Just make sure youhave more than enough proof to show them your relationship is genuine and you should be okay.

Cuba is a beautiful island with even more beautiful people but there is also alot of political unrest, economic problems, food scarcity and is generally very poor. Many there call it a prison floating in the middle of the Carribean.Yes, there are several proud Cubans that have no intend on ever leaving their country but there are many more that are aching to get out. This is a reality and the CIC in Havana knows this. As robertbola mentioned age difference is a concern when sponsoring someone from a poor island like Cuba. I know of a lady that is several years older than her Cuban husband and he made it clear he was excited to be coming here because he was tired of running out of hot water for days on end. It wasn't because he wanted to be with her, he was simply fed up. It's Cuba's reality... thousands of people frustrated at their confinement and lack of resources.

Gather more than necessary and ensure you have a strong file. Good luck!
 
Hi, I also have a difference age with my husband.. im older than him but is just a 4 years ..He is the one who is sponsor me and we may have an interview because our file was sent to the Local cic... but yes usually the husband is older than the wife and Immigration see this.. as long as you proof and give more than enough evidence im sure you will be ok...
 
to encourage the people who are worry on age differences, i want to tell them in same boat love my wife even though we have age differences, its true it rising concerns in visa officer's mind and they can refuse but if you are in genuine relationship no one will refuse all you have to provide evidences. on same forum we have learn people with 35 years of differences approved and here one member recently got approved in appeal they had 20 years of age difference. so dont worry! these laws and rules are made to make immigration system more better, not to make people life hard. good luck
 
Fernandita said:
Hi, I also have a difference age with my husband.. im older than him but is just a 4 years ..He is the one who is sponsor me and we may have an interview because our file was sent to the Local cic... but yes usually the husband is older than the wife and Immigration see this.. as long as you proof and give more than enough evidence im sure you will be ok...

I'm 4 years older than my husband as well. I was 21 and him 17 when we met (4 years at that age is quite a difference), 27 for me and 23 for him when I got my visa. We had zero issues with the visa, no interview or anything, but we also sent a whole bunch of evidence to show our relationship is genuine. I don't think the age was a factor in our case.
 
If you paid $3000 for marriage processing you are in trouble and should drop this Cubano immediately, your being used. I know, I am married to a Cuban now for over 20 years. I speak Cuban Spanish and completely understand Cuban cultural issues and day to day life having lived in Cuba as a foreigner for three years. Thirty years differences is a laugh, have your fun and get out with your life savings before your relieved of them.
 
Just to let you know I am 20 years older than my husband and his visa was denied. No reasons or facts or arguments were given in the refusal letter. I guess they did not like the age difference. I ordered the notes a couple of weeks ago, so I will know for sure the reasons for refusal.
 
I am 17 years older than my husband (he's Portuguese), ours was approved with no interview in just less than 5 months
 
Kaycee1 said:
I am 17 years older than my husband (he's Portuguese), ours was approved with no interview in just less than 5 months

Incredible!!! :o

My husband had interview on September 12 and 2 months later he received refusal letter without any explanation. The first thing the visa officer told him at the interview was that she did not believe our marriage was genuine. Then, he defended and explained himself, answered all her questions in a satisfactory manner. He said she looked pleased and convinced at the end of the 40 minutes long interview.
 
Just to let you know, if you look at the last posts of the original poster, it looks like she was a victim of marriage fraud...So IO have a good reason to be very scrutinizing of similar situations.
 
sidkrose said:
Just to let you know, if you look at the last posts of the original poster, it looks like she was a victim of marriage fraud...So IO have a good reason to be very scrutinizing of similar situations.

Yes - I remember reading the OP's story when she discovered the fraud. It was horrible.

I'm someone else with an age gap. I'm 17 years younger than my husband (I'm the Canadian who sponsored him). We were processed in four months despite the age gap. I think this was due to the fact that he's American, we dated and lived together for several years before getting married, similar religious / educational / professional backgrounds, same group of friends (we met through friends), extensive trips taken together (25+ trips together involving flights), strong connections to family on both sides, etc. We provided a great deal of proof in our application to overcome the age gap.

I do feel lucky because I know others have suffered due to age gaps. I think we were also fortunate because our age gap is the kind that CIC considers to be more "acceptable" (i.e. woman younger than man).
 
I would estimate 9 out of 10 Cubano/Canadian relationship are fraud. That is based on over two decades of observation on and off the island. There is a reason Cuban women once out of the country do not seek out Cuban men. Ask one day why of a Cuban woman why that is, I already know the answer she will tell you. I have heard it over and over from so many Cuban women both on and off the island and seen it with my own two eyes. There will always be the one or two exceptions but that is the 1/10 part of the equation.

Stay away from Cuban men is a golden rule for foreign women out here. Your just buying heartache by the ton. Try this site cubaamor.org it is filled with season pros on the topic. All have been burned by Cuban(s) one way or another and can spot them a mile away. PROS!!!!! Tell them your story and let them tear it apart for you and put it back together again only correctly.