where will the baby be born?om saif said:guys, my brother got the citizenship one year ago and he is expecting a baby. will she get the citizenship as well or not according to the law?
Yes, the child of a naturalized citizen who is born after the date of naturalization will be a citizen, no matter where in the world the child is born. However, if that child is born outside of Canada and then has a child of his or her own, also born outside of Canada, that child will not be a Canadian citizen under most circumstances.om saif said:guys, my brother got the citizenship one year ago and he is expecting a baby. will she get the citizenship as well or not according to the law?
I totally agree! After what they have done to us, I will make it a point to fight the Cons, starting now even if I cannot vote yet. I left the US to get away from those regressive freaks, and yet they have their own party up here, it seems.Munchenxx said:The best solution is to veto the Conserverants once we obtain citizenship!
Guys ignore this post, too much drama, none of that will happen.ingotiblum said:Here's a scenario that will, for sure, happen to some people:
Say you get your citizenship according to the new law, and few months later you get a good job offer from the US. You leave for 2 years, and then decide to come back. During your absence, a lot of people gets their citizenship questioned due to leaving Canada immediately after obtaining citizenship (it is going to keep happening, no matter what law the government puts in place).
So, you want come back to Canada, you even found a job and have an offer, but you get in trouble because now you are being treated / regarded as one of "those guys".
The question is: you loose your citizenship, what are you then to Canada? You are not a PR anymore, because you lost that status as soon as you became a citizen.
Are you a visitor, do you need a work visa? Kids are starting school in 2 weeks, job offer is waiting, your spouse is looking for work as well... and then what? You go back to where you came from originaly? Start fighting the system, prooving that in the moment of signing the intent to reside, you weren't looking for that US job?
I became a PR a few months ago and have no intention whatsoever to leave Canada, but it is not hard to see that a lot a honest people will get in serious truble because of those who are abusing the system. And the number of abusers will remain the same, they will just have to adjust their timeline a bit due to the changes in the law.
I understand the increase from 3 to 4 years, I even understand no more pre-pr time (even though it affects me)... but intend to reside is something that can, and I'm affraid will, be used in a bad way.
Agreed. What I am wandering is also the 'technical' aspect of the 'intent to reside' requirement. If they really want to enforce this, they will need special technical systems and trained personnel to keep tab on people -to put them under 'surveillance'. What would happen, say, if I leave Canada and come back 3 years later? How would they sort me? Would they check my status from the computer and question my intention at the border? Would they put me in detention at the Canadian borders? Any of these practices would violate fundamental human rights. If we have law in this country, none of these practices should be acceptable.Munchenxx said:I believe the rights to move to wherever freely is a basic human right from God and should not be deprived of by any kind of "system" created by the stupid politicians!