JamesB123 said:
Hi Everyone,
I've been reading your helpful insight and wisdom here and I'm truly hoping you can help me out!
I'm a Canadian, born and raised. My wife is Chinese. We live in China. 8 months ago we had a daughter. I'd like to take my daughter home to meet her grandparents. Today we went to the Visa office to get a visa for my wife and daughter.
Let me state here that I'm aware of the issue regarding holding dual-citizenship of Canada and China. We were simply going to apply for a visa for our daughter using her Chinese Citizenship. We want her to be afforded the best opportunities we can and feel that she can make a decision about which country she wants to be a citizen of when she's mature enough to make an informed decision.
So we went to the Visa office and because I'm a Canadian Citizen my daughter is automatically a Canadian citizen as well and they would not allow us to use her Chinese passport. They didn't take it from us, they simply said "No!". A kinder and gentler agent mentioned that I should contact the canadian consulate. Which I did. They basically said nothing.
I know that once we use her canadian passport we will be forced by Chinese gov't to renounce one of her citizenships. This is not a choice I feel I'm ready to make... nor is my wife.
Is there any way around this? I've heard whispers of being able to use HK as a portal to double chop two passports. I've also heard that there are some ways around having to use the Canadian passport to go back. I just don't know what they are... I don't understand the logistics of such a thing.
Any suggestions? Tips? Bits of advice? Moments of wisdom you're willing to share?
I just want my daugher to meet her Canadian family. It shouldn't be this hard... should it? :'(
So, your daughter has a CHinese passport, but not yet a Canadian passport. Right?
It takes about a year to get a citizenship certificate, and I think a few months more to get a Canadian passport, so going that route (even if you wanted to) would not allow her to visit Canada any time soon.
Is it difficult to get back her Chinese citizenship if she should "go Canadian" now, and later wish to revert to Chinese citizenship? If not, I'd apply for her Canadian citizenship now, because travelling is a lot easier with it.
But what confuses me is that Canada won't deal with your daughter as a Chinese citizen which she is, and give her a travel visa, merely because she qualifies for Canadian citizenship (but doesn't have it yet). Canada allows dual citizenship.
Did Canada give you a good reason?