marcus66502 said:
Umm No!
Not to open another can of worms here but that is factually incorrect. The Minister can initiate proceedings to repeal a grant of citizenship if he/she can show that an applicant never qualified for citizenship in the first place, and the way to show that is to show that the applicant was not actually a PR at the time the citizenship application was processed.
(full post quoted below)
This is in response to my statement:
"Unless CBSA commences cessation proceedings, a refugee's actions constituting re-availment have no impact. Thus, for example, if the refugee is qualified for citizenship, applies and becomes a citizen before CBSA commences any cessation proceedings, the individual becomes a citizen and that cannot be taken away even if it is shown the individual earlier had re-availed himself of his home country's protection."
While I am no expert, and especially so regarding refugees, I am confident my statement is
correct.
In particular, the only grounds for taking away (revoking) citizenship are:
-- misrepresentation or fraud made in the process of applying for status in Canada (including refugee and PR status) or in the application for citizenship (section 10.(1) current
Citizenship Act)
-- conviction for certain criminal offences (section 10.(2) in current
Citizenship Act)
The second of these appears likely to be repealed this year (subject, perhaps, to obstruction by Conservatives in the Senate), pursuant to proposed legislation in Bill C-6.
There is
NO provision for revoking or terminating the citizenship of an immigrant, who came to Canada as a refugee, based on re-availment of home country protection. In particular, there is simply no provision of law which gives any Minister the authority
"to repeal a grant of citizenship if he/she can show that an applicant never qualified for citizenship in the first place," UNLESS it is shown that the applicant made
misrepresentations leading to the grant of citizenship.
And, to be clear, there is no provision for the termination of PR status on the grounds the PR came to Canada as a refugee but has re-availed himself of his home country's protection. Re-availment is grounds for cessation of refugee status. Thus, however, if there are proceedings brought resulting in cessation of refugee or protected person status based on re-availment, that
automatically results in the termination of PR status (this is pursuant to change in law in 2012).
In other words, a refugee's re-availment of home state protection does not automatically affect PR status. CBSA or CIC (IRCC) must commence cessation proceedings, give proper notice to the affected refugee/PR, provide the refugee/PR an opportunity to explain or contest the allegations of re-availment (or other grounds for cessation), including a hearing if requested, and the decision must be consistent with the law and with fair procedure, including proper notice of the decision and the reasons for the decision.
If that process was not followed
before citizenship was granted, no Minister has authority to revoke or remove or terminate or repeal the person's citizenship later . . . except in the obvious situation, which would be where the applicant made misrepresentations or committed fraud in obtaining status or citizenship.
marcus66502 said:
Umm No!
Not to open another can of worms here but that is factually incorrect. The Minister can initiate proceedings to repeal a grant of citizenship if he/she can show that an applicant never qualified for citizenship in the first place, and the way to show that is to show that the applicant was not actually a PR at the time the citizenship application was processed. The whole citizenship application rests on a PR status whose sole basis is refugee status. Once it is established that that basis no longer existed, the argument can be made that the applicant was not in fact a PR during the time the citizenship application was processed.
I don't know the exact details of how the Minister would go about knocking down this house on shaky foundations but I do know that citizenship can be repealed if the requirements for it were not met before the oath, and there is no statute of limitations for commencing such repeal proceedings. Any time they can prove you didn't actually have the PR status required for a citizenship application, they can move against you.
This is just what happens when you let the UN do the thinking for you. Asking the courts to rule that obtaining a passport and returning home does not constitute re-availment of your home country's protection is akin to asking us to believe that sticking your hand in the cookie jar does not imply you meant to grab cookies.
Seriously? This is what it's come to any more? The judges might as well go ahead and issue these absurd rulings right at the start and spare everyone the time it takes to run the "theater" of courtroom arguments. The judges have already made their rulings in their heads based on their own personal opinions and anyone who believes courtroom speeches are more than just "keeping up appearances" should have their heads examined.
In the case of Xin Li Yuan, the judge highlighted that by using his Chinese passport to return to China, he had alerted Chinese authorities to his presence. And yet, later down the ruling the judge says that he had NOT re-availed himself of his home country's protection because he was "hiding" while in China ("hiding" established on nothing other than Yuan's words IN HIS DEFENSE after the commencement of cessation proceedings). In other words, you can travel to your home country as a refugee as much as you like. All you have to say in your defense is that even though you traveled to your home country, you were hiding there the whole time. And that's sufficient for a conclusion that you did not actually re-avail yourself of your home country's protection. Never mind that when you showed up at your country's borders with your own passport, you let your home country government know you were available in the country.
My best guess is that you have confused the authority of the Minister to
not grant citizenship versus the authority to revoke, repeal, or otherwise terminate citizenship. Again, the only grounds for revoking a grant of citizenship, once granted, are prescribed in section 10 of the current
Citizenship Act, and those are basically just two:
-- fraud/misrepresentation
-- terrorism related crimes
Moreover, again, merely obtaining a passport from one's home country, even traveling there and living there, does
NOT have any automatic effect on an individual's PR status.
Only if CBSA commences cessation proceedings is there an impact. And PR status remains valid unless and until there is a final determination in the cessation proceedings. Only if there is legal cessation does that affect PR status, but indeed if there is legal cessation then PR status is automatically terminated. No separate government action or notice is required. Upon cessation of refugee status, then PR status is terminated as a matter of law.
And of course if this happens BEFORE a PR applying for citizenship actually takes the oath of citizenship, the applicant-PR is NO longer qualified for a grant of citizenship.
If the government identifies reason to believe the individual re-availed himself of home country protection
after the oath of citizenship has been taken, again so long as there was no misrepresentation in obtaining status or citizenship, there is no legal authority to revoke or repeal that individual's citizenship.
case of Xin Li Yuan
marcus66502 said:
In the case of Xin Li Yuan, the judge highlighted that by using his Chinese passport to return to China, he had alerted Chinese authorities to his presence. And yet, later down the ruling the judge says that he had NOT re-availed himself of his home country's protection because he was "hiding" while in China ("hiding" established on nothing other than Yuan's words IN HIS DEFENSE after the commencement of cessation proceedings). In other words, you can travel to your home country as a refugee as much as you like. All you have to say in your defense is that even though you traveled to your home country, you were hiding there the whole time. And that's sufficient for a conclusion that you did not actually re-avail yourself of your home country's protection. Never mind that when you showed up at your country's borders with your own passport, you let your home country government know you were available in the country.
Justice Boswell's decision (see http://canlii.ca/t/gkfq5 ) offers a good, albeit partial outline of how the 2012 change in law has affected PR-refugees, discussing in detail the consequences of cessation pursuant to the 2012 changes in law.
Beyond that, Justice Boswell's decision reiterates what I have posted multiple times: that the finding of re-availment itself is a determination of fact. This is a conclusion which must be based on a reasonable assessment of the evidence. (see paragraphs 35, 36 in
Justice Boswell's decision). Based on the particular facts and circumstances, Justice Boswell ruled that the RPD's finding that Xin Li Yuan re-availed himself of Chinese protection was
NOT reasonable.
As I posted above:
[Fact of obtaining and using home country passport raises presumption of re-availment
"is not conclusive. The refugee can explain and argue this does not constitute re-availment in his particular case."
Justice Boswell in effect concluded that the RPD had unreasonably rejected Xin Li Yuan's explanation and refutation.
That is not the end of that story, however, as the case was returned to the Refugee Protection Division for redetermination. I do not know whether Xin Li Yuan succeeded or was again adjudicated to have his status ceased, or that any decision has yet been made.
Caveat regarding PR-refugee friendly decisions:
There are many cessation cases, and the outcomes vary considerably. For those affected, they should be careful not to read too much into the decisions favouring these particular PR-refugees. The individual-specific factual details can matter a great deal. The law is somewhat unsettled, with a number of challenges still pending. Outcomes for some with what appears to be stronger cases have gone the other direction, depending (it appears) on which Federal Court justice decides the case. And there may be some revision in policy and practice taking place at IRCC under the new Liberal leadership.
For example of some cases going against the PR-refugee even for relatively few trips to home country, using home country passport, see cases cited and linked in earlier post of mine above, last year:
dpenabill said:
A case which perhaps better illustrates the import of travel to one's home country, in conjunction with obtaining a passport from one's home country, is found in
the Kuoch decision, where the PR traveled to her home country
five times between when she became a protected person in Canada in 2005 and December 2013. Reasons for the visits included to visit her ill mother, then to attend her mother's funeral, and other trips related to her two sons engagements. The Board decided she reavailed herself of her home country's protection and that her protected person status had ceased. (As a result, her PR status would automatically terminate pursuant to
Subsection 46.(1)(c.1) IRPA, as added in 2012.) Justice Shore upheld this without certifying any questions for further review.
Similarly, there is the
Balouch decision, involving two trips to the home country some three years apart, one to visit a grandmother and during which the PR also had surgery, thus staying six months, and the other, more recent trip, was for 34 days to visit an ill uncle (undergoing chemotherapy) and also to get plastic surgery. Her status was deemed ceased. Justice Heneghan upheld this decision.
Davis William Lezama Cerna case:
Again, there are many cessation cases; again, caution should be exercised in drawing conclusions from any specific decision.
I mention this case in particular, however, because it reinforces important aspects of Justice Boswell's decision in a factual context involving extensive travel to the PR-refugee's home country, and because it illustrates a particular context in which many of these cases have arisen: when the PR-refugee has an application for citizenship pending.
See http://canlii.ca/t/gl76g
This case illustrates a Federal Court justice taking what appears to me to be a fairly creative approach to avoid a harsh outcome for a PR-refugee who had, nonetheless, obtained his home country passport (renewed it twice in fact) and used it to travel to his home country on multiple occasions.
Justice O'Reilly accepted that this individual's decision to obtain his home country passport and travel to his home country was not re-availment but based on the [mistaken] belief that his Canadian PR status protected him. Thus he did not have a
subjective intention to obtain his home country's protection.
That's is a very generous assessment by the Federal Court and not one another PR-refugee should rely on as likely to happen in their case. But again, this illustrates that before status can be adjudicated and cessation effected, the PR-refugee is entitled to an opportunity to explain and contest an allegation of re-availment, and while the presumption exists (the impact of which should not be underestimated), it is not necessarily conclusive for those who have obtained their home country passport even if they have traveled to their home country.
The other salient aspect of the
Cerna case is that it illustrates the manner in which the 2012 change in law has had a dramatic impact: it comes up in the processing of citizenship applications by RP-refugees.
Commencement of cessation proceedings:
As best I can discern, the typical cessation case might be triggered by a PoE examination, such as when a refugee returns to Canada after an absence, and upon arriving at a PoE (particularly after an extended absence) presents a home country passport. In the course of the PoE examination CBSA would become aware the refugee had obtained a home country passport, and stamps in the passport would indicate actual use of the passport. Even without going back to the home country, this meets the UNHRC guideline indicating a presumption of re-availment.
It warrants noting that, it appears, many PR-refugees specifically obtained a home country passport precisely so they could travel to their home country. The Travel Document Canada issues to a refugee does
not authorize travel to the refugee's home country (as I understand it, these TDs explicitly exclude authorizing travel to home country). But many refugees have encountered compelling reasons to return to their home country, like a seriously ill parent back home or a family member's wedding, and having a sense they could travel to their home country for such purpose without encountering the danger they had fled, they look for ways to make the trip. But to do that they need their home country passport. And many have been willing to risk traveling to their home country.
And as noted in the
Cerna case, cited and linked above, many times (probably usually) they are not aware of the potential consequences, that their status as a refugee is subject to cessation and that, in turn, will terminate their Canadian PR status.
Prior to 2012, once the refugee had become a PR there was no consequences for doing this, for obtaining a home country passport or traveling to one's home country. Even if CBSA closely examined the returning PR-refugee, cessation of refugee status would have no impact on PR status, so there was no reason to initiate cessation proceedings. One of the more controversial aspects of the 2012 change has been the cessation of refugee status resulting in loss of PR status based on actions by the PR-refugee prior to the change in the law, when there were no consequences for in effect re-availing oneself of home country protection. Thus, for example, after 2012 CBSA brought cessation proceedings against PR-refugees who had done things like spending a lot of time in their home country some years before.
In particular, one of the more high profile cases involved an individual for whom there was an official decision his PR status was not lost due to an extended absence to his home country, a Residency Determination proceeding assessing whether he was inadmissible for a breach of the PR Residency Obligation. Then years later, after 2012, CBSA again went after this individual in a cessation proceeding based largely on the same facts, the same extended period of residing in his home country many years earlier, determined cessation of status, and the cessation was upheld on appeal, including the consequence of terminating this individual's PR status. The court ruled the cessation provision terminating PR status applied regardless when the re-availment occurred. In effect, thus, it applied retroactively . . . although technically Justice O'Reilly ruled this was not a "retroactive" application of the law, even though the consequences apply to cessation based on acts prior to the change in law -- see the Peter Sum Li case: http://canlii.ca/t/gh849 Nonetheless, this individual lost PR status many years later based on spending time in his home country many years prior to the 2012 change in the law.
Citizenship Applications on Hold:
The most salient impact of the 2012 change has been for PR-refugees applying for citizenship. The applicant for citizenship must submit a copy of
all travel documents covering the relevant time period, and must declare
all travel abroad. Those PR-refugees who had obtained a home country passport thus disclosed this fact to CIC. Those PR-refugees who traveled to their home country thus disclosed this fact to CIC. (Of course those who concealed or otherwise did not disclose such facts committed misrepresentation, in itself a separate ground for denying citizenship.)
And for many all went well until the test-interview, when their passport and travel declarations were examined in some detail. And even then they were not advised of a problem. But they were not scheduled for the oath. The months and for many the years went by. In the meantime, unbeknownst to the PR-refugee, CIC had made a referral to CBSA, informing CBSA of the information about the home country passport and home country travel, referring the PR-refugee to be investigated for cessation.
The first time many of these individuals became aware that CBSA or CIC was taking action to terminate their refugee status, thus also their PR status, thus rendering them
NOT eligible for a grant of citizenship, was when they got formal notice of cessation proceedings. For more than a few, there was the notice, and an opportunity to respond, and a hearing, and then the cessation determination. (Again, typical such case is the
Cerna case, cited and linked above.) Even then, it appears many received no notice from CIC about their citizenship application. Under Kenney and Alexander, CIC simply stopped processing their citizenship applications and otherwise would not grant citizenship.
For those who sought recourse in the Federal Court, the results have been mixed. Some have found sympathetic Federal Court justices who identified technical reasons to overrule cessation.
It was such a case which triggered me to start this topic. That was the Otto Raul Godinez Ovalle case. See my first post in this topic. See http://canlii.ca/t/gkgft (this case is also addressed in more depth in a later post, above, last fall)
Just as another example of an individual whose citizenship application appears to have triggered the cessation proceedings, while in the meantime CIC simply suspended processing the citizenship application, see the Abdalla Osama Khalifa case at http://canlii.ca/t/gn7gv
Note: Ovalle won. Khalifa lost.
This leads back to the anecdotal reports here by
shahbj, who earlier reported attending the test-interview, then this post:
shahbj said:
I checked my online status and it shows Decision Made.
So let us hope they send me Oath letter soon.
Decision Made at this stage tends to be good news. So this is promising. Since
shahbj has reported being in Canada pursuant to refugee status and obtaining a home country passport, and traveling to the home country, if indeed
shahbj is scheduled for and takes the oath of citizenship, this could indicate that under Liberal leadership the government is taking a more open or flexible approach to PR-refugees in these circumstances.
Obviously, a single report does not warrant a general conclusion. Moreover, it remains to be seen whether
shahbj is actually scheduled to take the oath.
And in the meantime the UNHRC guidelines still raise the prospect that a person in Canada pursuant to refugee status risks cessation of status if that person obtains a passport from the home country, especially if they travel using the passport, and even more so if they travel to the home country. The consequences can be so severe, the prudent course of action for PR-refugees is to
NOT obtain a passport (or renew a passport) from their home country and to
NOT travel to their home country . . . at least not without consulting with an experienced refugee lawyer.
In any event, overall, contrary to what is suggested by marcus66502, those granted citizenship cannot have their citizenship revoked or repealed because they allegedly re-availed themselves of their home country's protection.
(Noting, again, however, of course anyone who make misrepresentations in their application, such as not disclosing they had obtained a passport from their home country, or not disclosing travel to their home country during the relevant time period, could face revocation on the grounds of misrepresentation.)