frege
Hero Member
- Jun 13, 2012
- 29
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Paris
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 01-05-2012
- AOR Received.
- none
- File Transfer...
- 01-08-2012
- Med's Done....
- 02-12-2011
- Interview........
- none
- Passport Req..
- 28-11-2012 (copy only)
- VISA ISSUED...
- 05-12-2012
- LANDED..........
- 15-12-2012
The part in red was "The applicant is not required to have been residing in the country for one yearrjessome said:There is no contradiction. I'll give an example:
Admitted to the US on ANY type of work or study permit on Jan 1, 2012 and that permit is valid for 1 year. On January 2, 2012 you can apply for permanent residence to Canada (any program) and choose the appropriate US visa office for processing of your application.
Your quote discussed losing status after being admitted. Two different things.
Regarding your other point, refugee claimants are not processed the same way as other applications. They must prove torture and persecution, fear for life and safety, not be in a "safe third country", have no protection available ANYWHERE in their own country from police, government, etc. It's comparing apples to oranges. It's a very specialized section of immigration law and NOBODY on here that I've seen is qualified to discuss it at more than a basic level. However, that said, if a refugee claimant married a Canadian before their refugee application has been decided, the Canadian can apply to sponsor them for permanent residence as a member of the family class. A refugee claim is not an application for PR.
at the time of application, but to have been lawfully admitted to that country for a minimum oneyear
period at the time of application." This sounded to me as though it meant "lawfully admitted for a one-year period including the time of application." The other passage clarifies that that's not what's meant. Perhaps "contradiction" is too strong a term, but my first reading of the part in red was not compatible with the example you and they both give.
About refugee claimants, here's a scenario. A person escapes persecution in China and makes their way to Australia, where they claim refugee status. While their asylum claim is being processed, they fall in love with and marry a Canadian. Where do they submit their application to be reunited with their Canadian spouse? CIC says Beijing, or else wait for the asylum claim to be processed and approved in Australia, which could be very long. That doesn't seem fair to me. What is the actual harm in allowing their sponsorship application to be processed at the Sydney visa office?