I'd like my girlfriend to visit canada, primarily to see if she even likes it, or can stand it, to meet family, and to have a nice little vacation this winter.
I have been doing some research, and it seems like it might be a bit of an uphill battle. her situation isn't the best, but it isn't the worst?
She lives and studies in Thailand, but is actually from the Philippines. She has done some traveling in the past, and has proof, but they may mostly all be "easy" countries, nothing like the EU, the US or Australia, so that may not help her case at all. Previously she worked as an english instructor in Thailand, but they have begun clamping down on work visas and education in thailand of late, so she's decided to work on learning Thai proper (she can communicate ok, but needs to learn writing/reading better), and getting a real ED visa down the road.
I work as a computer programmer making a fairly decent wage, and as I telecommute, I can work from just about anywhere. So if CIC decides to be really asinine about it, I could just move to thailand or the philippines and skip all of the canada immigration bull. I happen to be rather fond of canada, and the family I have here, so I'd prefer not to leave.
I've already been to see her once, and I'm planning a second trip for the middle of Oct. We will likely also go visit her family in the Philippines during this trip. I was hoping that we could apply for a visitor visa in Bangkok, get some things in order, and hopefully have it in our hands by mid nov for my trip back home.
The CIC site says the average application time is 14 days in bangkok, so it is theoretically possible. But what I fear is the near instant rejection, or the months long delay with no news.
So I guess what I'm asking is, what are the prospects that this is even worth trying?
Secondary question... If that isn't a remote possibility, going the permanent resident + dual intent trv route is an option. she has made it very clear that should I ask, the answer is yes (Without actually saying it in a super obvious way). I wanted to wait till we were settled a bit and spent more time together full time before taking that next step, but it has been on my mind for quite a while.
I have been doing some research, and it seems like it might be a bit of an uphill battle. her situation isn't the best, but it isn't the worst?
She lives and studies in Thailand, but is actually from the Philippines. She has done some traveling in the past, and has proof, but they may mostly all be "easy" countries, nothing like the EU, the US or Australia, so that may not help her case at all. Previously she worked as an english instructor in Thailand, but they have begun clamping down on work visas and education in thailand of late, so she's decided to work on learning Thai proper (she can communicate ok, but needs to learn writing/reading better), and getting a real ED visa down the road.
I work as a computer programmer making a fairly decent wage, and as I telecommute, I can work from just about anywhere. So if CIC decides to be really asinine about it, I could just move to thailand or the philippines and skip all of the canada immigration bull. I happen to be rather fond of canada, and the family I have here, so I'd prefer not to leave.
I've already been to see her once, and I'm planning a second trip for the middle of Oct. We will likely also go visit her family in the Philippines during this trip. I was hoping that we could apply for a visitor visa in Bangkok, get some things in order, and hopefully have it in our hands by mid nov for my trip back home.
The CIC site says the average application time is 14 days in bangkok, so it is theoretically possible. But what I fear is the near instant rejection, or the months long delay with no news.
So I guess what I'm asking is, what are the prospects that this is even worth trying?
Secondary question... If that isn't a remote possibility, going the permanent resident + dual intent trv route is an option. she has made it very clear that should I ask, the answer is yes (Without actually saying it in a super obvious way). I wanted to wait till we were settled a bit and spent more time together full time before taking that next step, but it has been on my mind for quite a while.