- May 28, 2012
- 3
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Singapore
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 16-03-2012
- File Transfer...
- 21-06-2012
- Interview........
- "In Process" 16-11-2012 - No Interview Required
- Passport Req..
- 23-11-2012
- VISA ISSUED...
- 30-11-2012
- LANDED..........
- 11-12-2012
One thing I've noticed reading through this forum is that male spousal applicants appear to be denied and interviewed much more frequently than females. By a large margin. I don't have a personal stake in pointing this out since I am a male sponsoring my wife. It's just an observation.
If I were a female Canadian or Permanent Resident sponsoring my husband and he was denied or interviewed using weak justification, I would consider filing a complaint against CIC with the Canadian Human Rights Commission. The complaint would be that I was unduly discriminated against by CIC when they assumed that my marriage was more likely a fraud because I married a man. It probably has no legal merit, but the whole thing seems unfair to female sponsors.
In any event, hopefully the new rules they are putting in place such as the 5-year bar on sponsoring for new Permanent Residents and the 2-year conditional visa (whenever they get around to implementing that) will allow them to stop taking such a hard-line stance on those in genuine relationships.
If I were a female Canadian or Permanent Resident sponsoring my husband and he was denied or interviewed using weak justification, I would consider filing a complaint against CIC with the Canadian Human Rights Commission. The complaint would be that I was unduly discriminated against by CIC when they assumed that my marriage was more likely a fraud because I married a man. It probably has no legal merit, but the whole thing seems unfair to female sponsors.
In any event, hopefully the new rules they are putting in place such as the 5-year bar on sponsoring for new Permanent Residents and the 2-year conditional visa (whenever they get around to implementing that) will allow them to stop taking such a hard-line stance on those in genuine relationships.