zeeshanamin said:
Hello sir..
i want to ask you..if i get job there in canada..or eny person Offer us to work here in Canada..So all responsibility take for us i mean for who going Canada..
i want to ask you..they Can take responce like that only just......
reply me..Sir
Have a Good day. . .
It's very hard to deduce a proper meaning out of your sentences, but here is an attempt.
You would like to know (as per my understanding)
a) Can ANY one from Canada offer a job to a non Canadian?
The answer is No. There is a pretty strict criteria for an employer to convince Immigration Canada that they needed a person for a particular role, and they couldn't find him in Canada. That person exists some where else (you) and they wish to sponsor this Candidate. This is simplest explanation of this process. Some times it works (rather used to work) for low end jobs (cooks, restaurant managers, language translators etc.), but that is not the case any more. Government wants to ensure you are not taking away jobs from Canadians.
b) Assuming an employer can offer a job to a foreign national, will all immigration process be handled by the employer - OR by the employee (Applicant i.e. you)?
The answer is that there are two phases.
First is called LMIA (labor market approval) which an employer needs to obtain for an employee for a specific duration from Government. Employer applies to government and submits an applicant's profile. If they meet all the requirements, government might approve an LMIA. Then that LMIA is provided to future employee who submits work permit application in his home country / nearest embassy along with LMIA. The application can be refused at either of these stages. But the employee is not involved in obtaining LMIA.
Of course, there do exists situations in which LMIA is not required, but those are limited and probably won't apply here (e.g. a post doc researcher at a university in a particular field, some one with a spouse in Canada who is working on an LMIA based work permit (skilled job only), some one with a Canadian university degree etc.)