Wrong. If being denied a visa was the same as being denied admission for
all applicants, there would be no reason to separate 6d and 6e.
Some applicants don`t need to apply for visas to enter Canada (e.g. UK, US citizens). They just come to the border and seek entry. If they are turned away at the border, 6d would be `no`and 6e would be `yes`for them.
If they arrived the border and decided to apply for a `work permit upon entry` (which visa-exempt applicants can do) and it was denied, then 6d = yes (work permit which is a type of temporary resident status was denied) and 6e = yes (if they were
not allowed to enter as a visitor afterall i.e. denied admission) on subsequent applications.
For applicants that have to apply for visas first, if their application is denied, 6d = yes and 6e = no. Now, if a foreign student or worker or visitor already in Canada is denied an extension of their visitor visa or work permit or study permit, then they answer same i.e. 6d = yes and 6e = no on subsequent applications.
If on the other hand, their extension is denied AND they are asked to leave Canada within 30 days, then 6d = yes and 6e = yes on subsequent applications (because they have received a departure order too).
I was once denied a student visa to Canada. I have always answered 6d as `yes` and 6e as `no` and had no problems.
Hope this helps clarify things.
sashali78 said:
Actually its incorrect. Denied visa is equal to being denied admission to the country, whether it was denied at the border or before during the application itself.
There used to be a whole legal discussion about this sometime ago:
http://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/not-clear-on-backround-question-refused-admission-to-canada-t21276.0.html
So, OP, although I don't think it can result in misrepresentation as you answered YES to previous question and provided the details of visa refusal, ideally it should be fixed