When we came back earlier this month and . . . the officer . . . told us that how we shouldn’t be travelling back home and also not have the passport on us. . . .
. . . Now I have a few questions:
1. Since my wife was . . . . the primary applicant and not us we are not considered refugees in our own right? . . .
2. Worst case scenario, my wife loses her status for going back, can I sponsor her back as a spouse or no?
Note regarding references to the Esfand case
https://canlii.ca/t/glrm0 and the Heidari Gezik case
https://canlii.ca/t/gm3b8 . . . these are merely Federal Court decisions, thus NOT binding precedent in other cases. The WHO is subject to cessation question appears to be complicated. For further consideration see the Federal Court of Appeals decision in Siddiqui v. Canada case, 2016 FCA 134, [2017] 1 FCR 56,
https://canlii.ca/t/grsb2 and the Federal Court decision in Camayo v. Canada, 2020 FC 213, [2020] 2 FCR 575,
https://canlii.ca/t/j54n9 . . . noting that the FCA decision in Siddiqui does establish binding precedent.
Do you think it will be a good idea to apply for citizenship by the end of this year for all of us?
If there is an easy or obvious answer, I have not seen it.
We know that the current government is still making and proceeding with Applications to Cease Refugee Protection (ACRP) against Permanent Residents in the "
protected person class" (not necessarily limited to Convention Refugees) who have engaged in actions that evidence reavailment of home country protection. The latter is described and discussed at length in this topic. The short version is that obtaining a home country passport constitutes a PRESUMPTION of reavailment of home country protection (regardless where and how the passport was obtained . . . but variations in the circumstances can constitute part of the defense that includes rebutting that presumption), and using that passport, and especially using it to travel to the home country, are STRONG EVIDENCE of reavailment. All three combined: obtaining the passport; using the passport; and traveling to the home country, tend to make a very strong case of reavailment, one that can be difficult to rebut.
But there are many indications that CBSA does NOT pursue cessation against all protected persons, including those who have become PRs, who have done even all these. Why this person has the ACRP made against them, versus those persons who CBSA does not pursue cessation for, is largely a mystery, an unknown. We do not know what factors make the difference; although, as usual, it is fairly clear that the stronger the PR's ties with the home country are, and the more trips there, and the longer the trips there, increases the risk.
So, for example, PRs who have established or otherwise done business in the home country are almost certainly at high risk. At the other end, we've seen reports from some who only briefly visited the home country once or twice, and did so for something like an immediate family member's funeral or serious surgery, whose citizenship applications were not derailed because of this issue. We just have no idea where, in-between those extremes, the tipping point is.
Thus, as best we can discern, once a protected person (not necessarily individuals specifically determined to be Convention Refugees . . . again, see Siddiqui v. Canada case, 2016 FCA 134, [2017] 1 FCR 56,
https://canlii.ca/t/grsb2) has engaged in these actions, they are at RISK.
It is a problem that unless and until the formal ACRP has been made, or a successful citizenship application results in taking the oath and being issued a citizenship certificate, the affected protected person is largely in the dark about whether not CBSA is or will be conducting a cessation related investigation, potentially leading to the ACRP.
So, it can be very difficult to know whether there is an actual problem lurking. For those at risk, they can be very much in limbo.
It is difficult to forecast if a citizenship application will, in effect,
wake a sleeping tiger. Remember, however, that the citizenship applicant must disclose and present ALL passports that could have been used in the previous five years, AND disclose all countries visited during the previous five years, and if that information specifically shows the applicant to have obtained a home country passport and to have traveled to the home country, making the citizenship application can be a bit like a criminal mailing the prosecutor's office detailed evidence of the crimes he committed. (Should note, however, that reavailment is NO crime . . . it just means the individual has resumed a relationship with the home country and, so the argument goes, no longer needs status in Canada.)
I do not know if the anticipation, the suspense, is too hard to handle to wait long enough that any home country travel was more than five years in the past, and any home country passports expired at least five years past, but that might be about as safe an approach one can make . . . of course the safe approach was to never have obtained a home country passport, after obtaining status in Canada, let alone use such a passport, and to not travel to the home country after obtaining status in Canada.
Of course, if in the meantime the PR receives notice of the ACRP, that means the storm is arriving.
It is not clear whether obtaining a lawyer will help much before that happens, before an actual ACRP is initiated.
That said, a qualified, informed lawyer could help, in the meantime, explain things and maybe even offer some prediction.
Leading to . . . .
Alos- yes I did consult a lawyer, paid over a 100 dollars and the guy knew little to nothing about cessations. I am making another appointment with another lawyer this week, hopefully he will know better.
No Doubt: trying to find a lawyer who knows about this stuff is probably the best way to go. But that may not be easy.
It does not surprise me the first lawyer was not familiar with cessation. You may have to do some serious homework to find a lawyer who can help. While cessation itself is fairly straightforward, particularly cessation proceedings based on reavailment, there are complex tangents and, it seems (hard to know the score about this subject) some still unresolved issues, including in particular about WHO is subject to the cessation provisions.
But it is rather obvious there are not a lot of experts in this subject. I have seen quite a few reports about refugees returning to their home country, but my guess is that the vast majority of those who fled personal danger in their home country are not soon or regularly or even commonly going back to where their life would be in danger. So the field of affected persons is not likely to be a large number. Not likely a number large enough to attract many in the lawyer-class (even among the minority who are not money-grubbing, greed-driven, the rest are usually, nonetheless, constrained to pursuing causes for which there are paying clients).
For someone with the financial resources (if you are out there), perhaps a good lawyer not well acquainted with cessation could, nonetheless, be hired to do the research in order to become well acquainted.
I will offer references and links to two potential (but dated) resources:
the Canadian Council for Refugees here:
https://ccrweb.ca/en/psr-toolkit/other-useful-info-travel-outside-canada and here:
https://ccrweb.ca/en/cessation-basic-information
a law group's information about cessation here:
https://www.bellissimolawgroup.com/cessation-and-reavailment-could-i-lose-my-refugee-protection-and-my-permanent-residence-too/
And I will note that overall there are multiple questions looming. In regards to many aspects of this there are no definite answers, so far as I know.
Who in particular falls within the scope of potential cessation is something I have meant to research further but it is a complicated subject given the myriad ways in which individuals can obtain status in Canada through not just the procedures for refugees/protected persons but related pathways to status in Canada. And I am NO expert. I am NOT a Canadian lawyer. So I have kind of been waiting to see more definite information about this issue.
But the other big factor has to do with the practical criteria CBSA employs in deciding who to subject to cessation proceedings. As already noted, it appears clear that not every refugee-PR who obtains a home country passport and travels to the home country will face cessation proceedings. But many do. Again, we just do not know what makes the difference.
But the RISK is there. The consequences are huge.
So continuing the search for competent advice from a qualified, experienced lawyer is probably the best thing to do for now. That and make sure your contact information with CBSA/IRCC is accurate and current, and be watching for notices or such.