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teh123

Star Member
Sep 14, 2010
53
1
My daughter is in her last yr degree, Commerce stream and shall graduate early next year.She intends to pursue a program in HR in Canada in 2024.
However,I had married an American citizen and we had also applied for a green card,which got approved last year,we never applied for the visa tho as we no longer are together and shall be heading for a divorce which will mean that the green card application will be withdrawn.

Will this by any chance affect her Visa chances for Canada?i understand they are two different countries,but just wanted to understand!

Will appreciate any help on this!
 
My daughter is in her last yr degree, Commerce stream and shall graduate early next year.She intends to pursue a program in HR in Canada in 2024.
However,I had married an American citizen and we had also applied for a green card,which got approved last year,we never applied for the visa tho as we no longer are together and shall be heading for a divorce which will mean that the green card application will be withdrawn.

Will this by any chance affect her Visa chances for Canada?i understand they are two different countries,but just wanted to understand!

Will appreciate any help on this!

I would strongly recommend that she declare this under the visa refusals section in her study permit application. IRCC may view this as a refusal and it's very costly if you fail to declare something that IRCC regards as a visa refusal to Canada or any other country.

I don't know if this will impact her study permit applicatio or not. More likely, whether she is approved for the study permit or not will depend on factors such as ties to her home country, having sufficient funds, making sure her planned studies in Canada make sense in light of her previous education and work experience, etc.
 
I would strongly recommend that she declare this under the visa refusals section in her study permit application. IRCC may view this as a refusal and it's very costly if you fail to declare something that IRCC regards as a visa refusal to Canada or any other country.

I don't know if this will impact her study permit applicatio or not. More likely, whether she is approved for the study permit or not will depend on factors such as ties to her home country, having sufficient funds, making sure her planned studies in Canada make sense in light of her previous education and work experience, etc.
Thank you so much for the response and yes i totally agree that everything should be declared.But technically she wasn't denied a visa,coz we never applied for one,the green card application was approved and then things din go ahead after that,so if i understand it correctly we should still say a Yes,to the question of being denied a visa to any other country and explain everything Or say a No and then explain what the situation was?
 
Thank you so much for the response and yes i totally agree that everything should be declared.But technically she wasn't denied a visa,coz we never applied for one,the green card application was approved and then things din go ahead after that,so if i understand it correctly we should still say a Yes,to the question of being denied a visa to any other country and explain everything Or say a No and then explain what the situation was?

I would say yes and explain the situation. You do not want to say no when the answer should be yes.