Hello,
I have a complicated question, so please bare with me as I can really use your advice. I am a Canadian citizen living in Toronto and my fiancé is currently residing overseas in a country where the embassy have closed down due to civil war. She has access to an embassy in a country next door, however I looked online and the application processing time is 23 months!
I asked around, and was given the following advice:
- Go there, get married and take pictures to authenticate the marriage
- Then come back to Canada and start the sponsorship application
- Once I am approved, ask her to go to the embassy and apply for a one time entry visa so she can come here quickly and then we can complete the sponsorship application from inside Canada. This way we can be together in about 3 to 4 months which is reasonable.
- If the embassy refuses the visa, they should at least put our application as a priority due to the civil war situation, and it should get processed within 12 months.
1- I need your advice on the above. Is it reasonable? What are the chances that the visa will be granted? or that the application is given priority?
With the above, I run the risk of waiting 23 months for me to get reunited with my wife ! So I was thinking of alternative options:
- Like have her apply to a student visa, then we can get married after she arrives to Canada.
- Or have her obtain visitor or student visa to the United states, and then she can enter Canada and claim refugee status at the border.
2- If she applies for student visa and gets rejected, would that hurt our sponsorship application afterwards in any manner?
3- If the student visa is accepted, how fast can we get married and apply for sponsorship? Can she stay in Canada until she is granted PR even if she decided not to continue her studies anymore?
4- If she enters Canada from the United states by claiming refugee status, can we get married immediately and change her application status from refugee to family sponsorship? How easy is that to do?
I highly appreciate your advice on my situation.
Thank you
K.
I have a complicated question, so please bare with me as I can really use your advice. I am a Canadian citizen living in Toronto and my fiancé is currently residing overseas in a country where the embassy have closed down due to civil war. She has access to an embassy in a country next door, however I looked online and the application processing time is 23 months!
I asked around, and was given the following advice:
- Go there, get married and take pictures to authenticate the marriage
- Then come back to Canada and start the sponsorship application
- Once I am approved, ask her to go to the embassy and apply for a one time entry visa so she can come here quickly and then we can complete the sponsorship application from inside Canada. This way we can be together in about 3 to 4 months which is reasonable.
- If the embassy refuses the visa, they should at least put our application as a priority due to the civil war situation, and it should get processed within 12 months.
1- I need your advice on the above. Is it reasonable? What are the chances that the visa will be granted? or that the application is given priority?
With the above, I run the risk of waiting 23 months for me to get reunited with my wife ! So I was thinking of alternative options:
- Like have her apply to a student visa, then we can get married after she arrives to Canada.
- Or have her obtain visitor or student visa to the United states, and then she can enter Canada and claim refugee status at the border.
2- If she applies for student visa and gets rejected, would that hurt our sponsorship application afterwards in any manner?
3- If the student visa is accepted, how fast can we get married and apply for sponsorship? Can she stay in Canada until she is granted PR even if she decided not to continue her studies anymore?
4- If she enters Canada from the United states by claiming refugee status, can we get married immediately and change her application status from refugee to family sponsorship? How easy is that to do?
I highly appreciate your advice on my situation.
Thank you
K.