If you were at Canadian citizen at the time the child was born you do not need to sponsor it, only your wife.robin 107 said:hi - im a naturalized canadian , i was married outside canada and had a child born outside canada as well, my question is i want them both in canada - should i directly sponsor them or should i apply for my childs citizenship certificate 1st then sponsor my wife-- please help!! thanz
Leon: Is it more difficult to have the baby (born to a Canadian and a PR remain a citizen of the foreign country, but a PR in Canada?Leon said:To apply for a citizenship certificate, follow the instructions here: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/citizenship/proof-how.asp
You will send the application to the Canadian embassy, high commission or consulate responsible for your area.
To sponsor your wife, follow the instructions here: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/sponsor/spouse-apply-how.asp
You will send the application to Mississauga where they will first approve you as a sponsor and then send your file to the embassy responsible for your area.
Toby, I do not believe that it is up to you to choose that your baby does not get your citizenship. I believe that the baby is already a Canadian citizen when it is born and therefore you would not be able to sponsor it for PR and that is probably what you would be told if you tried. Some countries will allow dual citizenship, some will allow it only if you are born with dual because of dual parents, some will make the child choose at a certain age. If that happened in your case, say the child chooses at 18 and chooses Chinese citizenship, it would no longer be a Canadian citizen in which case you might be able to sponsor it for PR. However, after that, the child would have to meet the residency requirements of living in Canada for 2/5 years or they lose their PR again.toby said:Leon: Is it more difficult to have the baby (born to a Canadian and a PR remain a citizen of the foreign country, but a PR in Canada?
I am thinking of China, for example, which will not allow dual citizenship. If the baby became a Canadian citizen, he/she would have to get a consular visa to visit China. But with PR status in Canada and a Chinese passport, he/she could enter both countries without need for a visa.
Hi Leon:Leon said:Toby, I do not believe that it is up to you to choose that your baby does not get your citizenship. I believe that the baby is already a Canadian citizen when it is born and therefore you would not be able to sponsor it for PR and that is probably what you would be told if you tried.
If you are the father and you are a citizen who was either born in Canada or immigrated to Canada, the child would automatically gain your Canadian citizenship.toby said:The child's mother would be Chinese, and the child would be born in China, so why would the child automatically be considered to be Canadian?
No, you have to apply for the baby's proof of citizenship (citizenship certificate) at the embassy in Beijing and once you have done that you can get a temporary passport for the baby. Once you have the certificate, you can apply for a regular passport for the baby.toby said:But let's say you are right. Does that mean I simply apply for the child's Canadian passport at the embassy in Beijing?
That is only if you are a citizen who was born outside Canada and gained citizenship not based on immigrating but based on that one or both of your parents were citizens at the time you were born. If that is the case with you, then you can not pass on citizenship to your baby directly, you would first have to sponsor for PR which you could do from outside Canada because you are a citizen. You would only have to prove that you are intending to move to Canada once your baby gets the PR.toby said:I thought I had read elsewhere (in a thread in which you participated) that the process is more difficult than this: I would have to apply for a Temp visa (and probably fail), then a TRV (on H&C grounds), get the child to Canada, then sponsor it to Canada as a PR then citizen. Have I understood correctly?
No, Leon, toby can apply for baby's proof of citizenship (citizenship certificate) at the consulate in Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong and once toby has done and got that he can get a temporary passport (valid for 3 years from date of issue) for the baby. See this link:Leon said:No, you have to apply for the baby's proof of citizenship (citizenship certificate) at the embassy in Beijing and once you have done that you can get a temporary passport for the baby. Once you have the certificate, you can apply for a regular passport for the baby.
I mentioned Beijing because he only mentioned Beijing so I assumed that was best suited for him but true, if Shanghai or Hong Kong is better for him, he can apply there.steaky said:No, Leon, toby can apply for baby's proof of citizenship (citizenship certificate) at the consulate in Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong and once toby has done and got that he can get a temporary passport (valid for 3 years from date of issue) for the baby. See this link:
http://www.canadainternational.gc.ca/hong_kong/passport_services_passeport/children-pass-enfants.aspx?lang=eng
So it doesn't sound like you would get a 3 year passport for your child unless you have the citizenship certificate already before you apply.Following submission of the citizenship application, if travel plans cannot be deferred, you may submit a fully completed passport application along with all supporting documentation as well as your child's proof of travel, itinerary or airline ticket, as supporting documentation to assess the case. As your child does not have citizenship documents, you will need to submit the original proof of Canadian citizenship from one of the parents, the original foreign birth certificate showing both parents' names, original marriage certificate of the parents (optional), and the receipt confirming submission of the citizenship application. Our passport examiners will assess your case and determine the necessity of issuing a limited validity passport to meet your child’s travel needs.