Overriding notes:
The extent to which a refugee-PR will suffer inconvenience by not using a home country passport is
NOT relevant.
What matters is whether having or using the home country passport constitutes reavailment of home country protection, and if it does, then the Canadian government may determine there has been a cessation of protected person status, which in turn will
automatically terminate PR status.
A key question is whether or not the individual himself or herself has the protected person status which is subject to the cessation provisions. If the answer to this is yes, then using a home country passport could lead to loss of protected person status and loss of PR status . . . that is, loss of status to live in Canada.
Best approach: to travel abroad, obtain and use the special Travel Document which Canada will issue refugees. Even if costly and inconvenient. this is the better approach for any refugee whose status could be subject to cessation proceedings.
Consult with lawyer before doing otherwise.
LoveCanada10 said:
Hello. All the cases are related to getting a new passport from home country. My case is different. I am PR and my home country passport is withing Passport Canada as I got a Travel Document 2 years ago (The Travel Document is expired now). My home country passport won't expire till late 2018.
Many countries don't need visa if I travel using my passport + PR. However, I will need to obtain visa if using Travel Document. Getting the Travel Document is more hassle and expenses for me at the moment.
Any chance using my home country passport can cause me problems? I recently moved to a new city and even don't even have a guarantor for my application if have to apply for Travel Document.
Thank you,
I do not follow what is different about your case compared to other refugee PRs.
Since you are a refugee with PR status, it appears that yes, there is a chance that using your home country passport can cause you problems.
To be clear, the "problems" could be the cessation of protected person status and, consequently (automatically) the termination of your PR status.
In other words, using your home country passport could lead to losing status to live in Canada.
That is the current law.
Whether or not you are specifically at risk may depend on other factors. Moreover, we do not know the Canadian government's current policy regarding enforcement. The current law has been strongly criticized. The current Minister of IRCC has expressed some reservations about the current law. But so far there has been no definitive indication that the government is not enforcing the current law.
And under current law, using the home country passport can be a basis for finding a refugee has reavailed himself or herself of the home country's protection, and that is a reason which may lead to cessation of refugee protection, which in turn automatically would terminate PR status.
Thus, either do not use your home country passport, or before using your home country passport, best to consult with a licensed, experienced LAWYER, not a consultant, but a licensed immigration attorney. Moreover, there are indications many lawyers are not that familiar with the changes in law implemented by the Harper government. It is important, critically important, that the lawyer be familiar with IRPA Sections 95, 108, and 46 (c.1). Especially 46(c.1), which is the relatively new (albeit nearly 4 years old now) provision which automatically terminates PR status if there is cessation of refugee protection pursuant to IRPA Section 108(1)(a) to 108(1)(d).
Again, best to consult with an experienced immigration
attorney/lawyer who is familiar with loss of refugee
AND PR status based on reavailment of home country protection.
Otherwise, the best approach to keeping status in Canada:
-- Avoid using home country passport
-- Do not apply to renew home country passport
-- Do not travel to home country
References:
For section 108 IRPA see http://www.canlii.org/en/ca/laws/stat/sc-2001-c-27/latest/sc-2001-c-27.html#sec108subsec1_smooth
For section 46 IRPA see http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/I-2.5/page-10.html#h-27
For the UNHCR handbook, see http://www.refworld.org/docid/4f33c8d92.html or google
It is Section 108(2) IRPA which explicitly provides that the Refugee Protection Division may determine that refugee protection has ceased based on any reason prescribed in 108(1).
The provision which looms large in this context is IRPA subsection 108(1)(a) which states:
". . . a person is not [a person in need of protection if] . . . the person has voluntarily reavailed themself of the protection of their country of nationality"
The UNHCR, in turn, provides that it may be
presumed that a person has voluntarily reavailed themself of the protection of their home country if the person
has been issued a home country passport, let alone been issued and actually has used a home country passport.
Examples of official decisions referencing that issuance or use of home country passport supports a presumption of reavailment:
See paragraph 12 in Yuan v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 923 http://canlii.ca/t/gkfq5
See paragraph 11 in Li v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 459 http://canlii.ca/t/gh849
See paragraph 16 in Abadi v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 29 http://canlii.ca/t/gn0cx
In the latter, Justice Fothergill states:
"When a refugee applies for and obtains a passport from his country of nationality, it is presumed that he intended to re-avail himself of the diplomatic protection of that country (Handbook and Guidelines on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status under the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees at para 121 [Refugee Handbook] . . .
The presumption of re-availment is particularly strong where a refugee uses his national passport to travel to his country of nationality. It has even been suggested that this is conclusive."
These are just some isolated examples. The
presumption (which, again, is evoked by just obtaining a home country passport, let alone using it) may be rebutted. This has led to a lot of focus on actually using the passport, and especially using it to travel to the home country. What this means, in practical terms, is that just having a home country passport constitutes a
risk (a "chance") of problems, while actually using the passport probably has significantly higher risks, and using the passport to travel to one's home country definitely involves a
high risk (perhaps very high risk).
Overall: as I have said before, unless and until the current government definitively establishes a different policy, the prudent refugee-PR should avoid obtaining or using a home country passport, and especially avoid any travel to the home country.
Those who think they might do differently should, at the very least, first consult with a reputable, licensed immigration lawyer with particular expertise in this specific area, the law regarding reavailment of home country protection and loss of status based on that.