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Chinese Pre-C50 Applicants Going to HongKong Embassy to Protest.

popiston

Full Member
Feb 5, 2009
23
0
OUR EMAIL:
Dear Sir or Madam,

We are a group of Immigration Applicants (Skilled Worker category) from various locations in China . We have applied to the Hong Kong Police Office about our petition action which will be held on July 12, 2011. The action will take place on the Exchange Square Podium from 10:30-12:00. Our petition action is legal. We hope the action will help speed up the process.
Please arrange for at least one officer to accept our petition letter.
We also hope you could arrange a meeting with us at your convenience.

Sincerely
All Pre-C50 Applicants


REPLY FROM: re-canadaimmig.hkong @ international.gc.ca

Thank you for your e-mail of 28 June, 2011.

Your group or organization is not known to this office and we are not aware of any previous communications you may have had with us. Though your message refers to pre-C-50 applications it does not provide any specifics on the nature of your concerns. We will be pleased to hear from you in this regard.

There's no need to wait until 12 July. If you would like to send us a more detailed message by e-mail we will read it with interest and will be pleased to respond.


Immigration Section
Consulate General of Canada in Hong Kong
11-14/F, Tower 1, Exchange Square
8 Connaught Place
Central, Hong Kong


OUR PETITION MAIL:


Dear visa office:

Thank you for reading this letter. We are a group of Immigration Applicants (Skilled Worker category) from various locations in China , who have been compelled to present this petition due to the concrete and material distress we have been put through in the course of our experience navigating the immigration process at the Hong Kong Immigration office.

Our main concerns are outlined below:

Issue One: The Inefficiency of CIC Has Created A Huge Backlog of Cases.
Applicants before Feb 27, 2008 have seen our timeline stretch to as much as 55 months, without being given any sign that we are progressing through the system. The C-50 policies go against the principle of “First Come, First Served”, by lowering the priority given to SAP applicants.


Issue Two: Disregard for SAP Skilled Worker Applicants from CIC.
1. SAP applicants are being given no updates, requests, or other signs of progress, even after the waiting periods sketched out to us have long passed. This leaves us in a state of limbo, unable even to make short-term plans for our lives in China whilst we wait for our cases to be processed. This complete silence from the immigration office causes substantial problems in our daily lives and work, and feels to us to at least border on contempt for these applicants.
2. The passing of Act C-50 provides the CIC with an effective tool to clear some of the backlog. However, the Office continues to leave four-or-more-year-old Skilled Worker applications unfinished rather than go through the hearing, approval, and/or rejection procedures


We cordially request that the issues below be addressed:
1. Please Increase the quota for SAP applicants .
2. First come,first Served.
3. Please give us a clear sense of our applications' progress, along with some kind of rough schedule reflecting the realities of the CIC, and improve transparency of the hearing procedures. Maintaining the status quo is disrespectful to the applicants' human rights, and may also tarnish the public image of the Canadian government;
4. We old case applicants intend to continue to address the unfairness and injustice of the current policies and implementation. If the plan of the Hong Kong office is to decrease the accumulated cases through attrition by leaving cases unfinished and causing applicants to change their plans, we will not co-operate by giving up and staying home.
5. We also insist that the rules and policies be implemented fairly and justly. This includes grandfathering in cases presented before rules are dramatically changed, as happened when Bills started on Feb 27, 2008 and June 26, 2010 dramatically changed the situation of Skilled Worker Applicants. We should be processed under the rules in place at the time of our applications.


Thank you again for taking the time to read this letter. We understand the arduous task that the CIC faces, and hope you can understand the real and measurable harm that is resulting from the huge amount of uncertainty that we have been expected to accept as part and parcel of the immigration process.




Sincerely
All Pre –C50 Applicants
 

popiston

Full Member
Feb 5, 2009
23
0
Will you fellows do the same in your conutries?

Technically we will never get visas if there are enough new applicants.

We cannot protest in BEIJING because of the harmony situations.
 

pb55

Star Member
Aug 16, 2010
118
18
http://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/breaking-legal-action-proposed-by-abhinav-for-pre-feb-27-2008-applicants-t75993.0.html
 

Sarosh

Member
Feb 4, 2011
12
0
That is such a good move. I wonder why didn't we do it earlier. I am based in Beijing and would have loved to join (and also bring along my friends) had the petition been lodged in Beijing.
By the way, what is the latest situation? Are you going to go ahead with it? Has CHC made another contact with you? Please keep us updated and keep up the good work.
 

canada_future

Hero Member
Mar 2, 2010
399
23
Category........
Visa Office......
London, UK
NOC Code......
0631 & 6242
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
IELTS Request
7.5 sent with application
Good approach. We should also do it for London visa office and i wish all the best to you guys.
 

popiston

Full Member
Feb 5, 2009
23
0
Thank you all guys.

They should be there at that time. I heard it is raining heavy. Best wishes to them.
 

popiston

Full Member
Feb 5, 2009
23
0
Hurray!

Heros come back.


A embassider has talk with them.
Reporters also interviewed with them.

Details coming soon.
 

pb55

Star Member
Aug 16, 2010
118
18
Congrats on your efforts. Please keep us updated.

There is also a proposal for legal action to use writ of mandamas to get old files processed by Timorth E Leahy of forefront migration. ca
 

canadaforall

Champion Member
Aug 11, 2009
1,607
64
Category........
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
30th January 2009
Doc's Request.
February .12 .2009
AOR Received.
30. 08.2009
IELTS Request
no
File Transfer...
16.2.2009
Med's Request
march 27th 2012
Med's Done....
5 april 2012
Interview........
waved
Passport Req..
March 27th 2912
VISA ISSUED...
12.06.2012
LANDED..........
15.09.2012.
popiston said:
Hurray!

Heros come back.


A embassider has talk with them.
Reporters also interviewed with them.

Details coming soon.
Yes, it is true, someone will know that you have a problem, only when you speak out. Good they had voiced all what they had in mind.
 

popiston

Full Member
Feb 5, 2009
23
0
From The Standard (香港 - 英文虎報)

http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=30&art_id=113026&sid=33007723&con_type=1

Mainlanders swell Canada immigration backlog

Stephanie Chan

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Hongkongers seeking to emigrate to Canada are among a backlog of 28,000 - the majority believed to be mainlanders - who applied here and have been waiting for at least four years.

The situation will worsen following new caps on applications by skilled workers worldwide after Canada halved the maximum limit to 10,000 a year from July 1.

Hong Kong skilled workers applying before 2008 saw their processing times lengthened as mainlanders filed applications in Hong Kong in the mistaken belief that this would speed up the immigration process.

Canada capped applications received worldwide in 2008, with 38 occupations given priority. Such occupations were reduced to 29 last year.

Nine protesters gathered outside the Canadian consulate-general in Exchange Square yesterday, all claiming to have waited over five years for a reply on their immigration status.
The protesters, mostly from Shenzhen, said the consulate should follow a first come, first served policy.

"Before 2008, it was OK," said Wendy, a Shenzhen hotel management employee.

"We chose Canada because it was known as an immigrant country and accepted everyone. But after the new rules came in, everything just stopped."

George Fu, who works in the postal service in Beijing, said that originally the wait was only around two years, and therefore he planned accordingly.

"If you think that you will be leaving in two years, you're not going to think about moving houses or buying an apartment," he said.

Jacobus Versteegh, immigration program manager at the consulate, said Hong Kong receives more applications than Beijing, and therefore could not work through the backlog as quickly.
He denied that nothing was being done about the backlog. Of the 80,000 visas set to be issued worldwide this year, a quarter will be from backlogged cases before 2008, he said.

Though he empathized with the protesters, he said: "You can't lose what you didn't have. Just because an application has been received, it doesn't mean there's a guarantee."

For the past decade, Canada has received more immigrants from China than any other country. It currently accepts around 250,000 immigrants worldwide per year.
 

ADUFE

Hero Member
Jun 28, 2009
304
37
Well done guys! I'm sooo impressed,really! Wish others would also get a backbone; nothing venture nothing gain! I really hope you guys get the outcome you hoped for. :D :D :D
 

pb55

Star Member
Aug 16, 2010
118
18
popiston said:
From The Standard (香港 - 英文虎報)

http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=30&art_id=113026&sid=33007723&con_type=1

Mainlanders swell Canada immigration backlog

Stephanie Chan

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Hongkongers seeking to emigrate to Canada are among a backlog of 28,000 - the majority believed to be mainlanders - who applied here and have been waiting for at least four years.

The situation will worsen following new caps on applications by skilled workers worldwide after Canada halved the maximum limit to 10,000 a year from July 1.

Hong Kong skilled workers applying before 2008 saw their processing times lengthened as mainlanders filed applications in Hong Kong in the mistaken belief that this would speed up the immigration process.

Canada capped applications received worldwide in 2008, with 38 occupations given priority. Such occupations were reduced to 29 last year.

Nine protesters gathered outside the Canadian consulate-general in Exchange Square yesterday, all claiming to have waited over five years for a reply on their immigration status.
The protesters, mostly from Shenzhen, said the consulate should follow a first come, first served policy.

"Before 2008, it was OK," said Wendy, a Shenzhen hotel management employee.

"We chose Canada because it was known as an immigrant country and accepted everyone. But after the new rules came in, everything just stopped."

George Fu, who works in the postal service in Beijing, said that originally the wait was only around two years, and therefore he planned accordingly.

"If you think that you will be leaving in two years, you're not going to think about moving houses or buying an apartment," he said.

Jacobus Versteegh, immigration program manager at the consulate, said Hong Kong receives more applications than Beijing, and therefore could not work through the backlog as quickly.
He denied that nothing was being done about the backlog. Of the 80,000 visas set to be issued worldwide this year, a quarter will be from backlogged cases before 2008, he said.

Though he empathized with the protesters, he said: "You can't lose what you didn't have. Just because an application has been received, it doesn't mean there's a guarantee."

For the past decade, Canada has received more immigrants from China than any other country. It currently accepts around 250,000 immigrants worldwide per year.

Jacobus Versteegh, immigration program manager at the consulate,
he said: "You can't lose what you didn't have. Just because an application has been received, it doesn't mean there's a guarantee."

:mad: arrogance. :eek: