- Jan 16, 2015
- 5
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Hong Kong
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 19-12-2014
- Doc's Request.
- 12-08-2015 (HK Police cert)
- AOR Received.
- 05-03-2015
- File Transfer...
- 10-03-2015 (SA); 30-03-2015 (AOR2);
- Med's Request
- 12-08-2015
- Med's Done....
- 13-08-2015 (re-med)
- Interview........
- wavied
- Passport Req..
- 02-11-2015 (DM2), no PPR
- VISA ISSUED...
- 16-11-2015 (COPR)
Hello,
I got a police clearance request (even though I submitted a RCMP Criminal Record Check with the application. I guess it expired in 3 months so the Hong Kong Visa office is requesting it again).
And it says "Police Certificate: From each country/state where the residence period has been six months or longer since the age of 18, provide an original police clearance certificate from Hong Kong SAR. " copied word for word from the email.
I am confused with the wording. Could anyone offer some advice?
From the part "From each country/state where the residence period has been six months or longer since the age of 18, provide an original police clearance certificate", I understand it as whichever country I have lived for longer than 6 months after my age of 18, I should provide a police certificate from that country. If that is the case, then for me it would only be a Canadian police certificate (i.e. the RCMP Criminal Record Check), because I have been living and studying in Canada since the age of 18 and never travelled to Hong Kong or other countries for more than 6 consecutive months.
However, from the second part of the paragraph "provide an original police clearance certificate from Hong Kong SAR", it seems like regardless of where I lived since age of 18, the office still wants a police certificate from Hong Kong (even though I have not lived there for more than 6 months consecutively).
So my question is, should I supply the police certificate only from Canada, or only from Hong Kong, or might as well Both?!
(If the paragraph is "Police Certificate: From each country/state where the residence period has been six months or longer since the age of 18, provide an original police clearance certificate to Hong Kong SAR". Then it totally makes sense, but it's "from"! That's confusing.)
Thank you for any help in advance!
I got a police clearance request (even though I submitted a RCMP Criminal Record Check with the application. I guess it expired in 3 months so the Hong Kong Visa office is requesting it again).
And it says "Police Certificate: From each country/state where the residence period has been six months or longer since the age of 18, provide an original police clearance certificate from Hong Kong SAR. " copied word for word from the email.
I am confused with the wording. Could anyone offer some advice?
From the part "From each country/state where the residence period has been six months or longer since the age of 18, provide an original police clearance certificate", I understand it as whichever country I have lived for longer than 6 months after my age of 18, I should provide a police certificate from that country. If that is the case, then for me it would only be a Canadian police certificate (i.e. the RCMP Criminal Record Check), because I have been living and studying in Canada since the age of 18 and never travelled to Hong Kong or other countries for more than 6 consecutive months.
However, from the second part of the paragraph "provide an original police clearance certificate from Hong Kong SAR", it seems like regardless of where I lived since age of 18, the office still wants a police certificate from Hong Kong (even though I have not lived there for more than 6 months consecutively).
So my question is, should I supply the police certificate only from Canada, or only from Hong Kong, or might as well Both?!
(If the paragraph is "Police Certificate: From each country/state where the residence period has been six months or longer since the age of 18, provide an original police clearance certificate to Hong Kong SAR". Then it totally makes sense, but it's "from"! That's confusing.)
Thank you for any help in advance!