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Refugee status cessation and PRs applying for citizenship

dpenabill

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Apr 2, 2010
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There is not much this case, Salik v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2023 FC 794, https://canlii.ca/t/jxklg , adds to what is already known.

Nonetheless, a couple aspects warrant noting and emphasis.

The main one is that this case appears (most likely) to have been triggered by their application for citizenship and the travel history included in their application.

Another is that the extent of travel to the home country, and time spent there, is less compared to most of the other cases we have seen. Nonetheless there were several trips, not just one or two.

Leading, however, to the other case, which I overlooked:

New cessation case. Not sure there's anything new here: https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/fct/doc/2023/2023fc710/2023fc710.html
This is the Federal Court decision in Ibrahim v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2023 FC 710, https://canlii.ca/t/jxd94

Actually there is something slightly new here: Ibrahim apparently only traveled to the home country twice. This case involves considerably less time in home country than the vast majority of cases we have seen over the last many years which resulted in cessation.

And while it is not clear how much weight it carried, Madam Justice St-Louis (Federal Court justice deciding this case) observed that the RPD noted Ibrahim's travel to other countries using his home country passport in making reaching its findings as to reavailment.

An Overriding Observation:

The cases being seen recently are different than those catching my attention in 2015, which caused me to start this topic. Back then PRs were facing cessation for travel to their home country that, at the time of the travel, would have zero legal effect on their PR status in Canada. The 2012 change in the law was being applied to conduct BEFORE that change was even proposed, let alone adopted and in effect.

Moreover, back then it seemed like the message had not gotten out that the law had changed, that obtaining a home country passport and travel to the home country could cost a PR-refugee (which I would have, until the change in law, thought of as a former refugee, now a Canadian, a Canadian PR) their PR status and action by the RPD that would mandate deportation from Canada "as soon as possible," with no right of appeal.

So a major incentive to start this topic and follow this issue, in addition to the injustice of penalizing conduct that at the time the PR engaged in that conduct, was NOT subject to such penalty, was to help get the word out.

Eight years later, I think the word is out.

Some, like here, still claim ignorance. It warrants emphasizing that defense does not get much traction these days.

I still think that PR-refugees should be treated like former refugees who are, as of when they become a PR, like any other PR, subject to the same rules as other PRs. But that's in the realm of what "should be" the law. Generally I barely nod to what-it-should-be issues and even here I try to not let what I think the law should be distract or confuse what the rules actually are and how things actually work.

There should be no mistake, no confusion, what the law and rules are. That's what matters. A few posts ago I outlined the key elements. That warrants repeating; the way I see things is this:
-- For the PR-refugee who has not obtained a home country passport, best to NOT get one.​
-- For the PR-refugee who has obtained a home country passport, best to NOT use it, including NOT use it for international travel; however, there is very little reason to worry if the passport was obtained and used in some context, but NOT used for international travel (still don't obtain a home country passport; while the risk for just this is low, the potential consequences are severe).​
-- For the PR-refugee who has obtained a home country passport and used it for travel (but not to the home country), best to NOT use it again; still little reason to worry if the passport has been used once for international travel and is not used again. Risk may go up for any additional use.​
-- If, in contrast, the trip was to the home country, the country that issued the passport . . . risk assessment gets complicated, and goes up, potentially way up (and for multiple or lengthy trips to home country, the risk clearly does go way up).​

In regards to the last point, it warrants noting that the Ibrahim case, discussed above, involved just TWO trips to the home country.
 
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Sass12_

Newbie
May 21, 2023
7
1
Regarding my original passport being renewed and used to travel to another country for 2 weeks for a medical appointment, my lawyer advised that he writes a letter to immigration explaining the situation and argues that it’s better than just waiting to see what happens. Is this safe to continue with ?
 

dpenabill

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Apr 2, 2010
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Regarding my original passport being renewed and used to travel to another country for 2 weeks for a medical appointment, my lawyer advised that he writes a letter to immigration explaining the situation and argues that it’s better than just waiting to see what happens. Is this safe to continue with ?
Assuming you have done enough homework to find a reliable lawyer, I almost always will defer to a lawyer's judgment. They're the experts. I am NOT, not even close.
 

Tamiou

Hero Member
Feb 5, 2021
468
190
Update for whoever has been following my case over the years. To date, still never heard a word from IRCC since my test and interview 4 years ago.
Following legal advise and with legal helpand guidance, I filed a mandamus. The first stage was application for judicial review or leave. IRCC through Department of Justice responded with a notice of intention to appear, therefore becoming respondents in this case.
Last week we submitted my applicants record and we have 30 days to await their argument and hope the judge grants leave. According to my lawyers, I stand a good chance. Better still, they could respond by asking us not to get to a hearing and finish making a decision on my file. I hope and pray for the best outcome. I will keep everybody updated.
Any news?
 

Sass12_

Newbie
May 21, 2023
7
1
It’s me again regarding fear of triggering a cessation:
The lawyer once advised to write them a letter but upon discussing with his senior colleagues he wrote me this:


As I mentioned, I have been discussing your case with some of my more senior colleagues here at the firm. I learned recently that IRCC and the CBSA have a tendency to ignore submissions related to the Camayo case, which is the key case we relied upon to structure your submissions.

This means that there is a significant element of risk associated with making any submissions to IRCC regarding the renewal of your passports. Essentially, if we submit everything as planned, we may be handing IRCC all they need to commence a cessation proceeding on a silver platter.

While I do believe we have made strong arguments in your favour, there are still elements of your case which may be viewed unfavourably by IRCC. As such, I presented you with the following two options today in terms of next steps:
Continue with the submissions as originally planned and accept the risk that it may harm your case and/or trigger a cessation proceeding.

OR

2: Stop what we are doing and do not make ANY submissions to IRCC.


The advantage of option #2 is that we avoid drawing any unnecessary attention to the fact that you renewed your passports. The risk is that it could still lead to a cessation proceeding being commenced against you.

You should take some time to think this over and let me know what you want to do in a response to this email. I am also happy to discuss this further on the phone over the next couple of days.

Given the time sensitive nature of this situation, I recommend deciding within the next week.

Whomever has gone through this please advise me. It’s of great need.
Passport was renewed for a one time trip (not to home country)
Trip was less than 2 weeks and for medical purposes.
I am just 18 and don’t have experience with this.
 
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dpenabill

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Apr 2, 2010
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It’s me again regarding fear of triggering a cessation:
The lawyer once advised to write them a letter but upon discussing with his senior colleagues he wrote me this:

As I mentioned, I have been discussing your case with some of my more senior colleagues here at the firm. I learned recently that IRCC and the CBSA have a tendency to ignore submissions related to the Camayo case, which is the key case we relied upon to structure your submissions.

This means that there is a significant element of risk associated with making any submissions to IRCC regarding the renewal of your passports. Essentially, if we submit everything as planned, we may be handing IRCC all they need to commence a cessation proceeding on a silver platter.

While I do believe we have made strong arguments in your favour, there are still elements of your case which may be viewed unfavourably by IRCC. As such, I presented you with the following two options today in terms of next steps:
Continue with the submissions as originally planned and accept the risk that it may harm your case and/or trigger a cessation proceeding.

OR

2: Stop what we are doing and do not make ANY submissions to IRCC.

The advantage of option #2 is that we avoid drawing any unnecessary attention to the fact that you renewed your passports. The risk is that it could still lead to a cessation proceeding being commenced against you.

You should take some time to think this over and let me know what you want to do in a response to this email. I am also happy to discuss this further on the phone over the next couple of days.

Given the time sensitive nature of this situation, I recommend deciding within the next week.

Whomever has gone through this please advise me. It’s of great need.
Passport was renewed for a one time trip (not to home country)
Trip was less than 2 weeks and for medical purposes.
I am just 18 and don’t have experience with this.
This report is very much appreciated.

It is totally consistent with what most of us, and me in particular, apprehend and have discussed, and in particular it illustrates the huge difference between the compelling caution to NOT obtain a home country passport, for example, versus reassurance there is little risk, little reason to worry if a PR-refugee has (and even if they have and used it for travel other than to the home country).


"Whomever has gone through this please advise me. It’s of great need."​

As I repeat, I am NO expert. And I was not a refugee, so I have not come close to going through something like this.

But I have followed this very closely, for eight years now, and with @scylla's help have probably read (and I read these cases closely) the vast majority of actual cessation cases litigated in the Federal Court, if not nearly all of them. Based on that, and what you have reported doing, as I have posted several times, you really should have NO REASON to worry.

So, relax. Do not use the passport for travel again. Odds are very good all is well.

Regarding the Lawyer's Options:

Frankly, I read what you have shared to be a strong suggestion to NOT make any submission to IRCC. Which would be consistent with my view about how to best approach this. (Why poke a sleeping lion?)

While ordinarily I would not, and here did not, express a view contrary to what a qualified lawyer advises (with some exceptions), my inclination would have been (and still is) to do nothing, just wait. As I noted in response to your post about the lawyer proposing to send a letter to IRCC:
Assuming you have done enough homework to find a reliable lawyer, I almost always will defer to a lawyer's judgment. They're the experts. I am NOT, not even close.

So I did not suggest otherwise. Even though my view leans otherwise.

This recent update and report suggests you have indeed found a reliable lawyer, one willing to actually work out questions like this. And, importantly, willing to reconsider advice they have already given. And this change in advice makes good sense to me.

I cannot see any advantage in contacting IRCC about this. The second option seems the hands-down better way to go.

There should be no need to worry about this.


Some Further Observations:

Some probably have difficulty understanding why we say there is low or even very low risk of cessation just for having obtained and using a home country passport to travel other than to the home country, so there is no need to worry even when a PR has done this; but then be so adamant that a PR-refugee should NOT do this.

There have been a few forum participants who, for example, in one fashion or another, have said it is OK to obtain a home country passport and use it for travel other than to the home country, and at least one seemed to actually encourage doing this. The flawed reasoning underlying that view is the failure to give due consideration to the consequences, which for most PR-refugees would be severe and for many devastating, understanding that a cessation case can be made based on just obtaining a home country passport and more so if the passport is used at all for travel. That view tends to focus only on the risk of cessation, the probability of CBSA or IRCC pursuing cessation, which just for this does indeed seem to be quite if not very low. That's not quite playing Russian Roulette (good odds, but literally a dead end on the line), but in that direction.

It's like walking along the edge of a half-metre high curb versus along a ledge fifteen-metres above the ground below. The risk (the probability) of stumbling and falling off the curb and ledge are just about equal, but for the latter the risk of serious injury looms much larger.

All of which is to say that there is probably a low to very low risk of running into a problem given what you have done so far.

And I doubt that even if the lawyers proceeded to make the submission initially recommended, that would trigger cessation. The problem is it could. And, indeed, the submission itself would document grounds for cessation. As the lawyer indicated, the submission could in effect make the case. Here too, again, low probability of it triggering cessation does not make it a good gamble, given the seriousness and severity if a cessation action is commenced.


A Word About Camayo:

The lawyer's comments about the Camayo case are worth noting with some emphasis. I do not know precisely what "submissions" the lawyer is referencing, where they state:
"I learned recently that IRCC and the CBSA have a tendency to ignore submissions related to the Camayo case, which is the key case we relied upon to structure your submissions."​

In particular, I am not clear whether they meant the "submissions" ignored were made preemptively, as they were suggesting to do for you (which would be comparable to "your submissions"), or submissions made in the course of cessation proceedings, in response to a cessation action taken against the individual making those submissions.

My sense, not much better than a guess I suppose, is the latter, that they are referring to how Camayo is actually being applied in active cessation cases, and perhaps the observation about ignoring Camayo related submissions is specifically about the cases we have discussed here, above, in which cessation has been upheld in case after case notwithstanding the arguments against cessation made relying on the Camayo decision.

To be clear: CBSA and IRCC are obligated to follow the ruling in Camayo. They cannot ignore it. Camayo is binding law, a decision by the Federal Court of Appeals, not just a Federal Court or administrative tribunal.

And so far as can be seen, the law in Camayo is not ignored. In case after case, the parameters of inquiry defined by Camayo are applied. The far more common outcome, however, is that cessation is upheld, the Federal Court justices typically holding that the decision meets the standards imposed by Camayo. (Not always; will need to address this in another post.) Typical outcome is illustrated in a very recent decision authored by FC Justice Walker, in Dari v. Canada, 2023 FC 887, https://canlii.ca/t/jxwhw in which the Justice states: "The RPD effectively considered and balanced the relevant factors summarized by the FCA in Camayo FCA . . . "

That is, solicitor (lawyer) Styliani Markaki made submissions based on Camayo which did not persuade the court that the evidence before the RPD failed to support findings that the PR-refugee's actions met the voluntariness and intention elements. It is not that the submissions were "ignored" but, rather, were not persuasive as to the facts.

There was, I suspect, a lot of hope that Camayo would offer an escape hatch that would allow many who had traveled to the home country avoid the drastic, harsh consequences of cessation. Instead, it has become more of an outline for how to justify and uphold cessation decisions. Many of the decisions are more or less oriented to distinguishing why the PR-refugee in that case involves circumstances different from those before the FCA regarding Galindo Camayo.
 
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dpenabill

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Apr 2, 2010
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More Recent Cessation Decisions, Including Some Going the Other Direction

There have been some more Federal Court decisions published recently in regards to cessation; two of these just within the last few days.

Dari v. Canada, 2023 FC 887, https://canlii.ca/t/jxwhw (which I just mentioned above), a June 23, 2023 decision by FC Justice Elizabeth Walker, which upheld the RPD's cessation decision.

Abbas v. Canada, 2023 FC 871, https://canlii.ca/t/jxtq9 which is a June 21, 2023 decision also by FC Justice Elizabeth Walker which allowed the appeal and remands the matter to the RPD; this is a complicated decision which deals with a nuanced aspect of cases in which cessation could be based on Section 108(1)(e), as well as 108(1)(a), noting cessation of refugee status based on 108(1)(e) does not terminate PR status in contrast to cessation based on 108(1)(a) which automatically terminates PR status.

Canada v. Yun, 2023 FC 810, https://canlii.ca/t/jxm66 which is an appeal by the Minister of IRCC in a case where the RPD dismissed the application for cessation; this June 8, 2023 decision is authored by FC Justice Lobat Sadrehashemi upholding the RPD decision to dismiss the proceedings for cessation.

Some Observations:

Dari v. Canada
, 2023 FC 887, https://canlii.ca/t/jxwhw

I mentioned the Dari decision in the post above responding to @Sass12_ in regards to Justice Walker upholding the RPD's decision, holding that the RPD effectively considered and balanced the relevant factors summarized by the FCA in Camayo. It warrants noting with emphasis that Justice Walker ruled the RPD did so despite not having the benefit of the Camayo judgment at the time of its decision.

This is an issue underlying and complicating many of the cases still being decided by the Federal Court. There is a lengthy lag in time between RPD decisions and when appeals of those decision are decided resulting in the published FC decisions we see. Thus, until fairly recently almost all of the cessation cases were decided by the RPD before the FCA Camayo decision, but reviewed by the FC after the Camayo decision. So they are cases in which the RPD could not explicitly apply the standards dictated in Camayo because those standards had not yet been determined and published.

As I previously noted, there was, I suspect, a lot of hope that Camayo would offer an escape hatch that would allow many who had traveled to the home country avoid the drastic, harsh consequences of cessation. Instead, it has become more of an outline for how to justify and uphold cessation decisions. Many of the decisions are more or less oriented to distinguishing why the PR-refugee in the case before the FC involves circumstances different from those before the FCA regarding Galindo Camayo, and the FC's decision is typically oriented around explaining how the RPD's decision comports with the criteria and elements prescribed in Camayo even though the RPD was not explicitly following Camayo, not having this decision to follow at the time.

In general, this decision is consistent with many of the more recent cases, noting nonetheless this is another case in which the PR-refugee made only TWO trips to the home country.


Abbas v. Canada, 2023 FC 871, https://canlii.ca/t/jxtq9

As I noted, this case revolves around situations in which cessation of protected person status pursuant to Section 108(1)(e) IRPA might apply, which would not terminate a PR-refugee's PR status. This has been discussed in some depth in previous posts, in which the key court decisions are cited and linked. Generally, the fact that conditions in the home country have changed so that it is safe for the PR-refugee to return to the home country, which could support a cessation proceeding pursuant to Section 108(1)(e), does NOT preclude cessation for reavailment leading to the automatic loss of PR status.

I have discussed Section 108(1)(e) issues at length above, including quite recently (a bit over a month ago) in regards to the Karasu v. Canada, 2023 FC 654 https://canlii.ca/t/jx63x case (see post #723 May 19). I noted that there have been several cases involving various versions of Section 108(1)(e) arguments, and that "So far NONE have worked." I stated:
PR-refugees should recognize that even if things have changed in the home country, making it safe to travel there, to actually travel there risks cessation proceedings on the grounds of reavailment and all the severely negative consequences that follow.

It should be no surprise to those who follow cessation cases, that the lawyers Lorne Waldman and Steven Blakey are key players in many of these cases, and were the losers in the Karasu case . . . even though they took a pretty good shot at it. They seem to have done better, refining their arguments around Section 108(1)(e) perhaps, in the Abbas case. I do not know whether their argument this time around, which does not focus on Section 108(1)(e) as much as it does on the effect of the underlying factual situation in regards to the intent to reavail home country protection, will be persuasive on remand to the RPD, but one should admire both their tenacity and craft. They are working it, working all the angles. (I do not know Canadian lawyers well enough to recommend any in particular, except these two are clearly among those most experienced and informed and zealous in regards to these issues).



Canada v. Yun, 2023 FC 810, https://canlii.ca/t/jxm66

Generally the defense that there was no intention to reavail home country protection, based on the PR-refugee not knowing the consequences of renewing their passport and returning to the country of origin on their passport from that country, fails. Goes nowhere. As it did in the Dari case I discuss above . . . well, Justice Walker does acknowledge, in Dari, that "an individual’s lack of knowledge of the immigration consequences of their actions is a key factor in assessing intention to reavail." However, Justice Walker further states that this is not, however, determinative. And, indeed, Dari's principal argument was he did not know he would risk his refugee protection and permanent resident status by obtaining a Turkish passport and returning to Turkey using the passport, and in regards to this the RPD found Dari to be credible and accepted this testimony, but nonetheless proceeded to make a finding of cessation based on two trips to the home country, and Justice Walker upheld that.

It went the other way for Min A Yun before the RPD. Not knowing the consequences was key to finding a lack of intention of reavailment (there was no cessation, no loss of PR status, and the Minister's appeal was dismissed). She appeared to travel more often to her home country than Dari, for example, and in addition to obtaining new passports she obtained a driver's license in her home country. Moreover she had made some misrepresentations during a Port-of-Entry interview.

Which mostly goes to show how variable the outcome of these cases can be.
 

dpenabill

VIP Member
Apr 2, 2010
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This case, Aiapachettiar v. Canada, 2023 FC 934, which can be seen here https://canlii.ca/t/jz5p4 and is a decision authored by Federal Court Justice Michael D. Manson, offers very little, almost nothing relevant, in regards to how the cessation of refugee status applies to Canadian PRs. Aiapachettiar was NOT a Canadian PR when the Canadian government proceeded with the cessation action against him.

In particular, while it is not entirely clear from this decision that Aiapachettiar was NOT a Canadian Permanent Resident, an earlier IAD decision in regards to this same individual dismissed Aiapachettiar's appeal of the decision terminating his PR status . . . more than 13 years ago. That IAD decision, Aiapachettiar v. Canada, 2010 CanLII 80087, is here: https://canlii.ca/t/2f9hb

Nonetheless, for those who relish wading in the weeds and unraveling nuance, this is an interesting case. (Within just the last hour, in a mirror, I saw such a nerd, the sort who gets more excited browsing shelves a law library than an American redneck gets aroused in a strip club.)

It appears that Aiapachettiar was outside Canada since 2006 (probably outside of Canada as of 2004, perhaps since 2002) until 2018. According to Justice Manson's decision, Aiapachettiar made an application for a PR card in 2006 which was, again according to this decision, "denied because he did not meet the residency requirement." Federal judges are not immune from a casual use of language which can be misleading, including references to the procedure pursuant to which a PR card application can result in a decision terminating PR status for a breach of the RO as the "denial" of the application, glossing over the details of the process pursuant to which a PR card application triggers the preparation of a 44(1) Report leading to a Removal Order (in effect, the PR card application is denied, but there is not a formal decision denying the application; rather the individual is issued a Removal Order).

It appears, moreover, that Justice Manson's description of Aiapachettiar's immigration history was more off than just that, since the IAD decision refers to a decision made outside Canada, which would NOT be a decision made in regards to a PR card application. Rather, it appears (though the IAD decision does not make this clear) that Aiapachettiar had an application for a PR Travel Document denied.

So, not all the underlying facts referenced in the two cases match precisely, but the correlations that do match (such as those in regards to a period of detention in Sri Lanka, family in Germany and in India) are more than sufficient to conclusively show they are about the same individual.

How it was that Aiapachettiar was able to return to Canada in 2018, after an absence for 12 or 14 years, or more, is not stated. The IAD decision, back in 2010, merely mentions the Tribunal was "aware that the appellant was accepted as a Convention Refugee on October 15, 1989 and that this status may give him some rights in Canada," then went on to dismiss the appeal of the decision terminating Aiapachettiar's PR status for a breach of the RO (so it, in itself, had no direct effect on Aiapachettiar's refugee status). The more recent Federal Court decision merely states that "the Applicant returned to Canada in 2018 and the Minster brought a cessation of refugee protection application before the RPD alleging that the Applicant had reavailed himself of Sri Lanka’s protection," and that on January 17, 2022, "the RPD issued a decision granting the Minister’s application and stripping [Aiapachettiar] of refugee protection."

What a long strange trip.
 
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danielkhan11

Full Member
Jul 29, 2022
36
5
Hey everyone updating you on this
I applied for my citizenship myself
I also got my pr renewed
Travelled once again and stayed four months
I got my citizenship and sponsored my husband who arrived in Canada last
My advice to everyone is just apply for citizenship if it gets cessation get a lawyer
I did not withhold any info
After my first visit I was questioned if it was safe for me to travel I said yes as my grandparents had passed away
Second time I went I had already applied for my citizenship and my husbands sponsorship on the way back I wasn’t questioned just asked you have citizenship application in progress and reason for visit was just to visit my husband because I missed him
Hi, how long your spousal application took, and did they ask for an interview etc. thanks
 
Aug 4, 2023
11
1
Hello everyone,
I would need your suggestions @scylla @dpenabill. I will explain my whole story and try to make it short and easy. I know you will not give me legal advice but I found you have been following these cases for a long time and I will appreciate your advice.

Refugee case:
I came to Canada in 2018 and asked for protection. My case was accepted in October 2019. My PR was approved in December 2021.

During the process, the IRCC asked me for a police certificate from China as I spent 2 years in China as a student. I applied for a police certificate (one of my friends in China did for me) and they approved the Chinese version but when my friend asked them to translate it into English, the guy was asking for a valid passport because my previous passport was expired. But the other guy by mistake approved the Chinese version and did not check the passport copy which was expired. And then I applied for my country's passport which I did not know not to do. Anyhow it took time and then I took the Chinese version to the translator in Montreal and they translated it for me. My Pr was approved then.

In the meantime. I got an award from the Chinese Scholarship Council for the research I was doing and they sent my money to my Chinese bank which I was not using anymore. I called the bank and they asked for my old passport copy. I called the CBSA to give me my old passport they seized so I can provide it to them to release the money for me. And they provided me with my old passport.

PhD study: (not to show that I am highly educated just giving the snapshot of the whole story)

I applied for Ph.D. admission in one of Canada's best universities and I got admission and funding too. I was supposed to start in September 2021 but I requested deferral due to some issues. My mom went two surgeries back in my country In November 2021.
Then I was supposed to be starting in January 2022 but again my mom's situation was not good and the doctor was asking for another surgery. I emailed my Professor and asked again for deferral and mentioned that Mom is sick. I have that email in my history.

Then I started My PhD in May 2022. I was awarded the most prestigious award by the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and was ranked in the top 10 candidates in the whole of Canada. After I got many other awards for my PhD, many of them very prestigious from NSERC.

Marriage/ Relationship:

I was in contact with someone back in my home country in 2018 and then my parents did my engagement in 2019 when I was already in Canada. We were in contact from 2018 until our marriage.

Trips to home country:

As I mentioned above when I was getting a Chinese police clearance certificate I applied for my home country's passport. I got the passport later after some time.

1) when the doctor asked for third surgery for my Mom, Mom said I am not doing any more surgeries and she was asking for me because i did not meet her for 4 years.
2) there was no option for me but to go to my home country in March 2022 as I already asked my professor that my mom is sick and I cannot start my studies.
3) I visited my home country and after 17 days they scheduled the surgery. In the meantime, I also got married as she was waiting for me since 2018 and this was also my mom's wish to get married in front of her and case something goes wrong in the surgery.
4) The surgery went well and she is good now.
"here was my first trip to my country" (45 days)

After coming back I submitted a spousal sponsorship application. which is now in process for the last 15 months. I ordered GCMS notes and nothing was mentioned about me but the officer said the marriage is valid and an interview was required.

The IRCC also asked for the spousal application ADR and asked for chats, money transfer bills, and a Visit of Spr. I provided them with chats and money transfer receipts and wrote a letter that I did not visit because of my study and research obligations.

All the processing time, my wife was depressed and a miscarriage has also happened. Because of stress, she was passing out every second day and was m, missing me.
she attempted suicide (i don't want to say but have no option now) and I bought it a ticket right away to visit her. They did some dialysis and stuff while she was in the hospital. I left my classes and everything to go but my flight was delayed 24 hours and when I reached they already left the hospital. She is seeing a Psychiatrist now and doing well somehow
"Second trip after one year" (four weeks)

Port of entry officer question:
First trip:

the officer asked why I visited and I told her my mom was sick. she said you know you can not go and I said yes but I was in hiding and Mom was really sick. She took my passport and PR and went and did something. I don't know and then She came and asked for a Medical report and I told her that I did not bring it because I didn't know and told her if you need I can provide it later.

She said next time when you go bring the medical report with you and gave me back the passport and PR.

Now I don't know if she initiated the cessation or not but now I am thinking not because she shouldn't tell me to bring a medical report next time if I go again.

2nd trip:
when I come back the officer said why I visited and I said to see my wife I had the medical reports this time but he did not ask for it. just did something in the computer and gave me back the passport and PR.

Possibility of Cessation: (did not know these things before and was never educated by anyone)
I called the MP office to inquire why it is taking long for the spousal application. Every time they were just providing me with the status. I asked to speak to the MP because I did not want my wife to be alone anymore.
In the meantime, I applied 2 times for TRV and both times it was refused due to no family ties outside of home country.

The MP office contacted the Montreal call center about the refusal of the 2nd TRV because it was applied after the new policy spousal TRV.

Then I talked to the MP and she asked how you came to Canada and then she said you can't go back to your home country. From there I started looking into the immigration policies and found this thread.

I ordered another set of GCMS notes for the last refused TRV and received the TRV GCMS notes today.
There is mentioned in the notes:
Date: 2023/06/15
office: Montreal call center
TEXT: MP office status inquiry (no action). Provided TRV x2 refusal rationale. FC1 is under review. SPR returned to the Country of persecution on possibly two occasions. CR-3783

Today, I am shaking seeing these notes in the TRV GCMS notes.

The Spousal application GCMS notes I received on 2023/06/29 and there was nothing about me.

Next step:
Now I really need your advice on what to do. I am not sure if they initiated cessation for me or not.
I am in stress and can't focus on my studies anymore.

this is the 2nd year of my Ph.D. and I don't want something to happen to me.

If they really start doing the cessation what should I do?

All these things happened due to a lack of knowledge and were out of my control because the passport I applied for to get the police certificate and visited both times to my county due to an emergency. Also, I plead my country because of the Taliban, and the guy who was after, died in 2021, and then no one was caring about me. But still, when I visited I was hidden and never went outside just stayed in my home.

Option:
I am not sure if they will initiate or not the cessation process but I am really disappointed.
Before something happens, now I am thinking to apply for US green card based on an advanced degree and research. I have a strong profile with many research publications and national awards in Canada and outside. And I am sure I will complete my degree before any decision.

Please suggest, I am confused and sorry for the long story.
 
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