Hello all,
Recently, my boyfriend applied for a TRV to visit Canada this December, in time for the Christmas holidays. I am a Canadian citizen living in Malaysia, and he is Malaysian. As you all know, the visa application is onerous, at best. It took us weeks to gather all of the paperwork needed for his application and trust me, we couldn't have tried any harder.
The reasons his visa application was rejected are as follows:
- you have not satisfied me that you will leave Canada at the end of your stay (despite both my boyfriend and I submitting my work visa from Malaysia, employments letters stating that we both needed to return to Malaysia by January 5th at the latest, my housing rental contract, bonuses promised to us from our employers in early 2015, etc. We would definitely return to Malaysia.)
- your travel history (he lost his old passport (which was expired) but we listed the countries he has visited in the past and has obviously returned to Malaysia afterwards) His current passport is new this year, and only has one stamp in it - visiting Indonesia, of which of course he returned to Malaysia afterwards.
- purpose of visit (???? - we clearly stated we were going to Canada to visit my family and friends and for the Christmas holidays, of which, my entire family is rarely together - this would have been the first year we would have been all together in a long time.) We also submitted a detailed itinerary of what we planned on doing each day while in Canada for the month of December. My parents provided invitation letters, as did I, explaining that while I was a Canadian citizen, I resided in Malaysia and was inviting him to fly to and fro with me. The purpose of visit is clear - tourism and to visit my family! What more do they want?
- your current employment situation (my boyfriend provided salary slips, bank statements and an employment letter explaining that he has been employed at a law firm for the last 2 years.) What more do they need?
- your personal assets and financial status (he provided his bank records, salary slips and has enough money to support himself while in Canada. Our housing and food would have been taken care of by my family, as we would stay with them.)
We are absolutely devastated. As I mentioned earlier, this would have been the first Christmas in ages that my entire family would be able to spend together in many years. My parents were looking forward to meeting my boyfriend, as we are eventually planning on marrying in Malaysia. He is educated, employed, and has no criminal history or ties - he is actually an upstanding member of his community.
I feel ashamed that my country has denied him a tourist visa to visit Canada, and on such vague grounds.
The CIC website says not to re-apply, unless your situation has changed substantially. I'm asking for your advice - do you have any ideas on how to improve his chances of having his visa approved? I don't know how to make his purpose of travel more clear! Their denial will absolutely ruin my holidays, my family's (as we will not be going obviously if he doesn't have a visa), and his, as he's already been granted time off work. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Recently, my boyfriend applied for a TRV to visit Canada this December, in time for the Christmas holidays. I am a Canadian citizen living in Malaysia, and he is Malaysian. As you all know, the visa application is onerous, at best. It took us weeks to gather all of the paperwork needed for his application and trust me, we couldn't have tried any harder.
The reasons his visa application was rejected are as follows:
- you have not satisfied me that you will leave Canada at the end of your stay (despite both my boyfriend and I submitting my work visa from Malaysia, employments letters stating that we both needed to return to Malaysia by January 5th at the latest, my housing rental contract, bonuses promised to us from our employers in early 2015, etc. We would definitely return to Malaysia.)
- your travel history (he lost his old passport (which was expired) but we listed the countries he has visited in the past and has obviously returned to Malaysia afterwards) His current passport is new this year, and only has one stamp in it - visiting Indonesia, of which of course he returned to Malaysia afterwards.
- purpose of visit (???? - we clearly stated we were going to Canada to visit my family and friends and for the Christmas holidays, of which, my entire family is rarely together - this would have been the first year we would have been all together in a long time.) We also submitted a detailed itinerary of what we planned on doing each day while in Canada for the month of December. My parents provided invitation letters, as did I, explaining that while I was a Canadian citizen, I resided in Malaysia and was inviting him to fly to and fro with me. The purpose of visit is clear - tourism and to visit my family! What more do they want?
- your current employment situation (my boyfriend provided salary slips, bank statements and an employment letter explaining that he has been employed at a law firm for the last 2 years.) What more do they need?
- your personal assets and financial status (he provided his bank records, salary slips and has enough money to support himself while in Canada. Our housing and food would have been taken care of by my family, as we would stay with them.)
We are absolutely devastated. As I mentioned earlier, this would have been the first Christmas in ages that my entire family would be able to spend together in many years. My parents were looking forward to meeting my boyfriend, as we are eventually planning on marrying in Malaysia. He is educated, employed, and has no criminal history or ties - he is actually an upstanding member of his community.
I feel ashamed that my country has denied him a tourist visa to visit Canada, and on such vague grounds.
The CIC website says not to re-apply, unless your situation has changed substantially. I'm asking for your advice - do you have any ideas on how to improve his chances of having his visa approved? I don't know how to make his purpose of travel more clear! Their denial will absolutely ruin my holidays, my family's (as we will not be going obviously if he doesn't have a visa), and his, as he's already been granted time off work. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.