Hello everyone,
I'm hoping to get some experiential/legal advice here. Our situation's a bit complex, so I'll try my best to lay out the facts as plainly as I can.
I am:
A South Korean male, 26 years old.
I have have been living in Canada since 1999, on study permit from 1999 to 2011, and on postgraduate work permit since then.
I met my wife in February last year, we moved in together in July, and got married this January.
She is a Canadian citizen by birth.
We have been putting together an application for sponsorship immigration. Filling out the forms and assembling the evidence to prove our relationship genuine. No trouble so far, but then...
As some of you may know, South Korea has compulsory military service of 2 years. Foreign travel is severely limited for male citizens over 18 who haven't performed this service.
I haven't performed this service, and have no intention to, seeing as I have lived literally more than half my life in Canada, and also because I believe that the best shot at a happy, meaningful life for my newfound family is right here.
I thought, since my South Korean passport is valid until 2014.12.31, we could send the application ASAP and have my PR come out before that expiry date (in which case I can indefinitely delay entering military service until I receive my citizenship).
Couple weeks ago I got a call from the consulate notifying me that I must return to Korea within the next month, and apply for a one-time extension for foreign travel that is good for a year. (This extension is separate from my passport)
Now, if I don't go back, I will be criminalized in Korea. I have family in Korea, and they want me to return, apply for this extension, and somehow sort out the PR within the year that it would give me, assuming I get the extension. They want this because they want me to be able to visit Korea, in case of family emergency, etc.
My questions to you:
If we submit the sponsorship application now, and if I chose not to return to Korea by the end of April, would it matter that I became a criminal in Korea for this reason, after the application was submitted?
Furthermore, if my Korean passport was somehow made invalid during the application process, how would that affect the status of our application?
My wife is panicking and doesn't want me to go back, especially since the tension with North Korea is rising, and I don't particularly want to go back either, since I don't see how this one-year, one-time extension will make any difference long-term. As far as I know, the inland sponsorship application will take approx. 14 months if all goes well, so I would be criminalized in Korea anyway, come April 2014.
Much thanks for your advice,
Elphyon
I'm hoping to get some experiential/legal advice here. Our situation's a bit complex, so I'll try my best to lay out the facts as plainly as I can.
I am:
A South Korean male, 26 years old.
I have have been living in Canada since 1999, on study permit from 1999 to 2011, and on postgraduate work permit since then.
I met my wife in February last year, we moved in together in July, and got married this January.
She is a Canadian citizen by birth.
We have been putting together an application for sponsorship immigration. Filling out the forms and assembling the evidence to prove our relationship genuine. No trouble so far, but then...
As some of you may know, South Korea has compulsory military service of 2 years. Foreign travel is severely limited for male citizens over 18 who haven't performed this service.
I haven't performed this service, and have no intention to, seeing as I have lived literally more than half my life in Canada, and also because I believe that the best shot at a happy, meaningful life for my newfound family is right here.
I thought, since my South Korean passport is valid until 2014.12.31, we could send the application ASAP and have my PR come out before that expiry date (in which case I can indefinitely delay entering military service until I receive my citizenship).
Couple weeks ago I got a call from the consulate notifying me that I must return to Korea within the next month, and apply for a one-time extension for foreign travel that is good for a year. (This extension is separate from my passport)
Now, if I don't go back, I will be criminalized in Korea. I have family in Korea, and they want me to return, apply for this extension, and somehow sort out the PR within the year that it would give me, assuming I get the extension. They want this because they want me to be able to visit Korea, in case of family emergency, etc.
My questions to you:
If we submit the sponsorship application now, and if I chose not to return to Korea by the end of April, would it matter that I became a criminal in Korea for this reason, after the application was submitted?
Furthermore, if my Korean passport was somehow made invalid during the application process, how would that affect the status of our application?
My wife is panicking and doesn't want me to go back, especially since the tension with North Korea is rising, and I don't particularly want to go back either, since I don't see how this one-year, one-time extension will make any difference long-term. As far as I know, the inland sponsorship application will take approx. 14 months if all goes well, so I would be criminalized in Korea anyway, come April 2014.
Much thanks for your advice,
Elphyon