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.And another new one for you @dpenabill - https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/fct/doc/2023/2023fc794/2023fc794.html
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:
This is the Federal Court decision in Ibrahim v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2023 FC 710, https://canlii.ca/t/jxd94New cessation case. Not sure there's anything new here: https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/fct/doc/2023/2023fc710/2023fc710.html
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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