A recent Federal Court decision illustrates how dramatically the cessation process has affected the lives of individuals who had NO REASON to apprehend there was anything at all wrong about traveling to their home country.
See http://canlii.ca/t/j0qwh for Justice Campbell's Cerna decision.
Cerna, who became a PR as a refugee, applied for Canadian citizenship in May 2012. In his application, he declared that he had traveled to Peru on multiple occasions in the four years prior to his application for citizenship.
At that time the fact a PR-refugee had traveled to his home country had NO legal significance.
Then in December 2012, more than six months AFTER Cerna applied for citizenship, Canada changed the law and made cessation of refugee status applicable to PRs.
Sometime after that CIC put Cerna's citizenship application on hold WITH NO STATUTORY authority to do so.
MORE than TWO years after Cerna made the citizenship application, Canada again changed the law so that CIC could legally put applications on hold for situations like while investigating whether the applicant might be subject to cessation of status and loss of PR.
Now, more than SEVEN YEARS after Cerna applied for citizenship, Justice Campbell has denied Cerna's application for mandamus.
And now Cerna will likely face the cessation process . . . based on travel to his home country BEFORE the change in law which implemented consequences for a refugee's travel to the home country.
How this is in any way at all fair baffles me.
For reference, there was an earlier Fed Court decision (see http://canlii.ca/t/gl76g ) which set aside an initial cessation determination against Cerna, but winning that appeal only resulted in it being sent back to the RPD to be reconsidered. In that decision Justice O'Reilly stated:
The Cerna case is not at all about fraud; it is about a PR traveling to his home country KNOWING, at the time, he could leave to return to Canada to avoid the dangers he had fled, and having NO REASON at all to apprehend that Canada would change the law and use those trips to justify not only denying citizenship but to strip him of status to continue living in Canada.
See http://canlii.ca/t/j0qwh for Justice Campbell's Cerna decision.
Cerna, who became a PR as a refugee, applied for Canadian citizenship in May 2012. In his application, he declared that he had traveled to Peru on multiple occasions in the four years prior to his application for citizenship.
At that time the fact a PR-refugee had traveled to his home country had NO legal significance.
Then in December 2012, more than six months AFTER Cerna applied for citizenship, Canada changed the law and made cessation of refugee status applicable to PRs.
Sometime after that CIC put Cerna's citizenship application on hold WITH NO STATUTORY authority to do so.
MORE than TWO years after Cerna made the citizenship application, Canada again changed the law so that CIC could legally put applications on hold for situations like while investigating whether the applicant might be subject to cessation of status and loss of PR.
Now, more than SEVEN YEARS after Cerna applied for citizenship, Justice Campbell has denied Cerna's application for mandamus.
And now Cerna will likely face the cessation process . . . based on travel to his home country BEFORE the change in law which implemented consequences for a refugee's travel to the home country.
How this is in any way at all fair baffles me.
For reference, there was an earlier Fed Court decision (see http://canlii.ca/t/gl76g ) which set aside an initial cessation determination against Cerna, but winning that appeal only resulted in it being sent back to the RPD to be reconsidered. In that decision Justice O'Reilly stated:
"The Board failed to take account of Mr Cerna’s testimony that he travelled to Peru only on the strength of his belief that he enjoyed the security of having permanent residence in Canada, and the corresponding protection that his status carried with it. Further, he had no idea that he put his status at risk by travelling back to Peru. As the law stood at the time of his travels, cessation of refugee status did not affect permanent residence . . ."
It warrants a reminder that these cases are NOT about fraud or misrepresentation. Misrepresentation in the process has long been a separate ground for revoking both refugee and PR status . . . even citizenship, even many decades later.
The Cerna case is not at all about fraud; it is about a PR traveling to his home country KNOWING, at the time, he could leave to return to Canada to avoid the dangers he had fled, and having NO REASON at all to apprehend that Canada would change the law and use those trips to justify not only denying citizenship but to strip him of status to continue living in Canada.
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