For Reference, 21 Years And Still Pending
I have previously cited and referenced court proceedings involving a Canadian PR/Refugee, Mahmoud Sharafaldin, applying for citizenship subject to cessation proceedings.
Earlier this year there was yet another Federal Court decision involving Mr. Sharafaldin which still has NOT resolved the case against him seeking cessation of his PR status and has not resolved his application for Mandamus to compel IRCC to make a decision on his application for citizenship.
Mr. Sharafaldin applied for Canadian citizenship in 1999. Yes, 1999. And yes, that application is still pending . . . 21 years and still pending.
This last Federal Court decision only deals with whether certain parts of the CTR (Certified Tribunal Record) should remain redacted. Thus, the decision itself illuminates little or nothing about the underlying cases, nothing in particular about the merits of the Mandamus application seeking an order compelling the Minister to make a decision in regards to the application for citizenship, which has been pending now for more than 21 years, and nothing about the merits of the cessation proceedings (which have been suspended pending the outcome of the citizenship application).
The recent decision, issued January 6, 2021, is here: Canada v. Sharafaldin, 2021 FC 22 https://canlii.ca/t/jcftr
The previous Federal Court decision I have elsewhere cited and linked is here: Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness) v. Sharafaldin, 2019 FC 1168 https://canlii.ca/t/j2cx1
Some observations:
The fact the cessation case was suspended pending the outcome of the citizenship application is the OPPOSITE of how these cases usually work. Typically the citizenship application will be suspended or on hold pending the outcome of the cessation application. Why this case is different, the subject of the 2019 decision cited and linked above, is mostly about the fact that it is a particularly exceptional situation, the citizenship application had already been pending a decade and a half before the cessation proceeding was commenced, and in consideration of the particular manner in which the case had, to that point, proceeded. The key takeaway is that any other PR/Refugee applying for citizenship can expect the OPPOSITE approach; that is, if cessation proceedings are commenced, processing the citizenship application will be suspended and the cessation case decided . . . which, if it results in cessation of Protected Person status, that will in turn result in termination of PR status, and render the individual ineligible for citizenship . . . thus the citizenship application would be denied.
The timeline here also demands emphatic notice. Citizenship application pending 21 years, and still NOT resolved. Cessation investigation pending since at least August 2014, the formal cessation action commenced in June 2015 but for some reason not actually served on Mr. Sharafaldin until April 2018.
The application for Mandamus in regards to the citizenship application was filed in January 2019. It is still not resolved. This last decision simply clarifies Sharafaldin's access to information in the CTR so that his counsel can prepare to make submissions to the court.
A long, long, long road.
I have previously cited and referenced court proceedings involving a Canadian PR/Refugee, Mahmoud Sharafaldin, applying for citizenship subject to cessation proceedings.
Earlier this year there was yet another Federal Court decision involving Mr. Sharafaldin which still has NOT resolved the case against him seeking cessation of his PR status and has not resolved his application for Mandamus to compel IRCC to make a decision on his application for citizenship.
Mr. Sharafaldin applied for Canadian citizenship in 1999. Yes, 1999. And yes, that application is still pending . . . 21 years and still pending.
This last Federal Court decision only deals with whether certain parts of the CTR (Certified Tribunal Record) should remain redacted. Thus, the decision itself illuminates little or nothing about the underlying cases, nothing in particular about the merits of the Mandamus application seeking an order compelling the Minister to make a decision in regards to the application for citizenship, which has been pending now for more than 21 years, and nothing about the merits of the cessation proceedings (which have been suspended pending the outcome of the citizenship application).
The recent decision, issued January 6, 2021, is here: Canada v. Sharafaldin, 2021 FC 22 https://canlii.ca/t/jcftr
The previous Federal Court decision I have elsewhere cited and linked is here: Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness) v. Sharafaldin, 2019 FC 1168 https://canlii.ca/t/j2cx1
Some observations:
The fact the cessation case was suspended pending the outcome of the citizenship application is the OPPOSITE of how these cases usually work. Typically the citizenship application will be suspended or on hold pending the outcome of the cessation application. Why this case is different, the subject of the 2019 decision cited and linked above, is mostly about the fact that it is a particularly exceptional situation, the citizenship application had already been pending a decade and a half before the cessation proceeding was commenced, and in consideration of the particular manner in which the case had, to that point, proceeded. The key takeaway is that any other PR/Refugee applying for citizenship can expect the OPPOSITE approach; that is, if cessation proceedings are commenced, processing the citizenship application will be suspended and the cessation case decided . . . which, if it results in cessation of Protected Person status, that will in turn result in termination of PR status, and render the individual ineligible for citizenship . . . thus the citizenship application would be denied.
The timeline here also demands emphatic notice. Citizenship application pending 21 years, and still NOT resolved. Cessation investigation pending since at least August 2014, the formal cessation action commenced in June 2015 but for some reason not actually served on Mr. Sharafaldin until April 2018.
The application for Mandamus in regards to the citizenship application was filed in January 2019. It is still not resolved. This last decision simply clarifies Sharafaldin's access to information in the CTR so that his counsel can prepare to make submissions to the court.
A long, long, long road.