My questions are:
1. It's a bit strange the way this question is being asked. Is it in the past 4 years or since the age of 18? In the second paragraph, it says since the age of 18 only.
2. She lived in Qatar in the beginning of 2016, meaning that her primary address was in Qatar at that time. However, she travelled a couple of times for visits from Qatar and that broke the "183 days in a row" rule in the last 4 years. Given that she will mention her address in Qatar in the address history in 10) a), would it be better that she gets a PCC for Qatar? Obviously the address history excludes visits outside the country.
P.S. No issues about the 3 years she spent inside Canada. She didn't travel anywhere for more than 3 weeks in a row.
She's 34, so does she need PCCs since the age of 18 or just the past 4 years?
To illustrate her case better:
- The 4 years pre-dating her application will start from November 1st 2015.
- She lived in Qatar from 2012 and moved to Canada on July 1st, 2016.
This means that she lived in Qatar 183 days during the 4 year period, however she was out of Qatar on a couple weeks visits during her last few months in Qatar, so the 183 days are not in a row anymore. This is what I'm trying to ask, does she need a Qatar PCC since her stay in Qatar was interrupted by short visits outside the country?
Age is NOT relevant here, given that the individual was clearly more than 18 while living in the other country.
Otherwise, if the applicant checks "NO" in response to Item 10.b., it is NOT necessary to include a police clearance from any country.
If the applicant checks "YES" in response to Item 10.b., the respective country needs to be listed in the chart provided AND then the applicant needs to either --
-- provide an explanation why a police clearance cannot be submitted OR why it is NOT necessary based on one of the exceptions (country of origin, or a scenario similar to Example 1), OR
-- include a police clearance from the respective country
Query after query in this forum comes at this issue from the wrong direction, focusing on whether a police clearance is required rather than focusing on how to properly, best, most honestly answer Item 10.b. and following the instructions about providing an explanation or clearance if the appropriate answer is "YES."
In particular, it warrants remembering that it is the "YES" response to Item 10.b. which triggers the application requirement to submit a clearance from the respective country UNLESS one of the exceptions apply (country of origin exception or a scenario covered by Example 1). Whether to check "YES" or "NO" in response to item 10.b. does NOT depend on whether the applicant is required to submit a clearance. It works in the opposite direction. The proper response to Item 10.b. is a factual question about the individual's personal history and it calls for an HONEST declaration based on the
applicant's best understanding of what the question asks.
Can one honestly say, based on some brief excursions to other countries, they were NOT in a particular country for 183 or more days in a row even though they were LIVING in that country for more than six months? I suppose reasonable individuals can differ about this.
However, Example one in the application help refers to having "lived" in a country rather than referring to being actually physically present in that country. That's a clue. And that is what makes sense. After all, it is not as if the precise number of days in the other country makes much difference in the applicant's qualifications for citizenship. Item 10.b. is about applicants who have spent enough time in another country to warrant requiring the applicant to objectively document, upfront WITH the application itself, that the applicant has NO prohibitions related to criminal charges or convictions within the preceding four years, and to do this by submitting a clearance WITH their application (unless an exception applies). All other applicants are merely required to personally affirm (in Item 16) they have no charges or convictions in another country that would constitute a prohibition.
In any event, how the applicant responds to Item 10.b. will determine whether a police clearance must be included in order to make a complete application which will be processed by IRCC. If the applicant checks "NO," then no police clearance needs to be included. For this part of the application, that gets the application past the completeness check.
A "NO" response passes the completeness check even if that is NOT an accurate answer. Of course there may be repercussions later in the process depending on how inaccurate the "NO" response was and also depending on why the applicant responded "NO" in contrast to an IRCC official determining otherwise.
BUT THE ODDS ARE THERE IS NO NEED TO PARSE WHETHER BRIEF ABSENCES BREAK THE "IN A ROW" COUNTING OF DAYS and JUSTIFY A "NO" RESPONSE . . .
It warrants noting that since it is very likely a clearance from Qatar was submitted in the PR process, and the indication is there has NOT been travel back to Qatar since coming to Canada, thus no police clearance should be required even if "YES" is checked in response to Item 10.b.
Thus, there should be no need or reason to quibble about whether the application instruction about days "in a row" means brief absences from the other country interrupt the counting of days so that it is OK or even appropriate to check "NO," even though the individual was residing in the other country for more than six months. In most situations similar to this, the applicant will have included a clearance during the immigration process (attendant becoming a PR), and thus as long as the applicant has not returned to that country since landing, all the applicant needs to do is check "YES" and then list Qatar in the chart on the application form, and in the explanation box state something to the effect "Police Clearance provided with PR application and no return to Qatar since landing."
PARSING DAYS "IN A ROW" and BRIEF EXCURSIONS OUTSIDE THE COUNTRY:
For someone who was
LIVING in the other country long term and for more than six months (more than 183 days) within the relevant four years, despite this or that brief trip outside that country, it is likely the best, most honest response to Item 10.b., and certainly the more forthcoming response, is "YES." And this is supported by Example 1 in the application help which refers to having "
lived" in France (for a period of time longer than six months; in the example it refers to a "year") rather than to having been present in France for more than six months of days "in a row."
I am not clear why
@uppperkut said, in response to the examples quoted by
@JPBless, that "
None of these cover her case."
Yes I saw that. None of these cover her case.
The France example appears to apply (not the country of origin example), even though --
-- it is Qatar rather than France, AND
-- the period of time the individual "lived" in Qatar prior to landing, and within the previous four years, was 8 months (thus more than 183 days) and not precisely a "year (365 days)"
Again, note that Example one refers to having "
lived" in the other country, France, rather than being present in the other country for 183 or more days. Note as well that it states the applicant will "
need to provide a police certificate from France if [the applicant]
did not provide one with [his or her]
immigration application." To my view this is the example that best approximates the situation presented here, and suggests that the proper response to Item 10.b. is "YES."
But sure, some may quibble that living in a country for more than six months is NOT the same as being "
in a country or territory other than Canada for 183 days or more in a row" (this being the language used in the application for Item 10.b. currently) IF, if in particular, the individual took trips outside that country during that time. A "NO" response might even fly, not just past the completeness check, but through the rest of processing as well. Worst case scenario is IRCC later requests a police clearance, resulting in some delay in processing, and some risk the total stranger bureaucrat evaluating the application might have a negative impression of the applicant.