toby said:
What hasn't been addressed yet on this thread is WHY would the PR want to remain in Canada if the major reason for coming in the first place was to be with his/her Canadian spouse? Supportive family and friends are still in the home country, presumably, after only two years of immigration in Canada.
There are a variety of reasons that I can see:
(1) Children
(2) The reality that some people cannot return home after a divorce - for whatever reason - without bringing shame upon themselves and/or their families
(3) The fact that they may not have the means to return home. While we might take the ability to just purchase an airplane ticket and fly home as a given, that is not always within the means of a recent immigrant living in Canada with a spouse who has turned abusive and they've had to leave home under difficult circumstances.
Marrying to improve one's position in life is an age-old reason to marry. Canadian law and social custom do not require that a spouse remain in an abusive relationship simply because their economic opportunities have improved in Canada. Doing otherwise sounds very close to slavery.
Of the two rules here, it would seem the five year bar to sponsorship is a far better limit to the MOC issue than the two year relationship, since it seems the possibility of using the conditional PR as a weapon against the immigrant is unfortunately quite high.
It reminds me of another case I just read on here earlier today - a husband and wife. The husband is a US citizen, the wife a Canadian PR. They have a child together, but after a recent fight the wife withdrew her sponsorship of his PR, thinking that this was not an irrevocable decision apparently. He doesn't even HAVE PR, but the very threat that he might be forced to return to the US and effectively have his parental rights terminated via immigration is repugnant. The husband didn't come to Canada for the economic benefit, he came because he had a child with this woman. Further, from his description the fact that they were 18 months into the OUTLAND PR process (which takes 15 months or less for 80% of cases) had put an incredible financial strain on them and is likely one factor in the trouble within their relationship.
As for the OP, no matter why this question is being posted, rest assured that NOTHING in Canadian law requires you remain in an abusive relationship, whether physical, financial, or emotional abuse.