OMBO said:PEOPLE PLEASE TAKE ME OUT OF MY COUNTRY BEFORE I AM BEEN MURDERED
someone needs to do something for me to be fully confident to start a step and move out
OMBO said:ITS NOT EASY LIKE HOW YOU GUYS ARE SEEKING IT.THIS IS A LOT MORE DIFFERENT.someone needs to do something for me to be fully confident to start a step and move out....here is my e-mail if anyone whats to get in touch personally(dembodarboe1984@gmail.com)
Please give me hope to carry on with my life
OMBO said:PEOPLE PLEASE TAKE ME OUT OF MY COUNTRY BEFORE I AM BEEN MURDERED
From their website:CONTACT http://www.rainbowrefugee.ca/
Outside Canada
If you are an asylum seeker experiencing persecution because of your sexual orientation or gender identity, are afraid and you cannot get to Canada or any other safe country there is still something you can do.
In most situations you must leave your home country and go to a neighbouring country.
There, you must go to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees. They will give you an appointment.
They will interview you and decide if you are a Convention Refugee. They will give you a certificate.
With that certificate you can go to an Embassy, Consulate or High Commission.
If you want to be resettled in Canada, you go to the Canadian Embassy, Consulate or High Commission.
It may take several years for this process to be finished.
You could become a Government Sponsored Refugee (GAR)
You could be sponsored by people in Canada.
Arriving at the Airport
If you arrive at the airport as an asylum seeker, tell the first officer you talk to that you want to make a refugee claim.
An immigration office will take you to a meeting room in the airport for an interview to find out if you are eligible to make a claim.
At the airport, the immigration officer will decide if you are eligible to make a refugee claim.
If you have proper identity documents and are found to be eligible, the officer will usually let you go.
The officer will keep all your documents. Ask for a photocopy of them and a copy of the notes of the interview.
The officer also issues a conditional removal order.
An officer will give you a package, including a Basis of Claim Form (BOC).