Sing0370 said:
Hi,
I am navjot kaur,21 years of age. I arrived Canada on 1st September 2016 To visit my husband,who is a student here. I have multiple visa as a visitor for 8 years. Now i am at 25th week of pregnancy. I heard that i have to leave canada before six months,it doesn't matter if i have 8years visa or what.. it is necessary for everyone to leave Canada before 6 months. Is it true? Or just a rumour by people?
I don't want to leave canada during my pregnancy. I have a valid visitor visa for 8 years. I want to give birth to my first child in canada. Do i not allowed to stay here for more than 6 months and give my child birth here? I want to stay with my husband during my pregnancy. I am so worried about if i can give birth to my baby in canada or not,if i have a valid visitor visa though? Please help me out of this tension.
what I find confusing about your story is why your husband and you did not apply formally for you to accompany him off back of his study permit then you would not be in this position which by sound of it you just have a standard visitor visa . For example :
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/study/work-spouse.asp
If your husband had followed the process for a student with an accompanying spouse you could have stayed for the same time with no issues but on a standard visitor visa 6 months at a time tends to be the maximum per visit and without sounding too dramatic if you do not apply formally for an extension you could technically be considered staying illegally after end this month, February.
As with any country overstaying can have implications later if applying to stay permanently whether or not you give birth to what will be a Canadian citizen if born in Canada which by the way grants a mother or father no special priviledge for a PR application.
At 25 weeks you still have time to either apply for a visitor extension, apply for status off back of husbands study permit or leave the country whilst you can still fly. For sure would not use the pregnancy as a reason to extend your visitor stay if thats your choice as likely an extension would be rejected.
If you manage to stay through the pregnancy as a visitor who is going to pay the not insignificant costs for the birth and even more so if any complications given as a visitor you will be responsible for those costs, travel insurance will not cover you.
Ultimately you need to discuss and resolve your options with your husband keeping in mind with any decision you need to consider any effect on your long term prospects in Canada