Sweden
VIP Member
- Mar 31, 2012
- 179
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- London
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 12/04/2012
- File Transfer...
- 13/07/2012
- Med's Done....
- 02/02/2012
- Interview........
- Waived
- Passport Req..
- Exempt
- VISA ISSUED...
- 05/11/12, received in Canada 19/11/12
- LANDED..........
- 24/11/12, PR card received 30/01/12
soon most likely !SwedentoQuebec said:no I haven't heard from them at all and I'm getting kind of anxious since people after me on the spreadsheet are getting DM or being asked for more info. I don't know what to think... anyway I'm reaching my 150 days after sponsor approval on Friday... So fingers crossed this week!!!
Send the RPRF to Mississauga and to London, so they can cross it off their checklist.Swedish citizen said:I´ve been asked to pay the permanent residence fee, but I did that in December, so I guess I just have to send the receipt to Mississauga again. Next thing was the travel documentation, I was so sure that I read somewhere that you don´t need to fill in that one when you apply through London. My bad! That´s a tough one, I travelled a lot in my work, but manageable.
The worst one is a period where my partner and me lived together but in an apartment that I owned when he moved in. We don´t have a single proof that we lived together, I explained why in my application but now they want proof of joint bills, tenant agreement etc. But all the bills were in my name and since I owned the apartment, he just moved in. That´s what freaks me out right now. All I can do is to explain it all over again and I´m not so sure they´ll buy that.
Anyone who knows a innovative way to proof it?
The travel documentation ( the special travel form) is indeed not required, but sometimes they will ask the applicant about it, if they have a long travel history and the way it was explained in the application was not complete enough for them. using the form is just a good way to list the history in a form that suits CIC. If you traveled a lot for work, and you can't remember the exact dates, write information as much as you can, and get a letter from your job certifying that it was part of your duty to travel for work, and during this period of time, you traveled regularly to X and X country.
For the common-law proofs, that's a tricky one. Can you get letters from common friends that went and visited you, or stayed with you? if your partner was paying part of the bills, or part of the rent, then try and find your old bank statements and highlight transfers from him to you, corresponding to shared expenses, or part of the rent, or something for the bills, whatever you guys figured out at that point. Did he ever get letters addressed to him at your place? did you ever get bills, or an "ICA/Coop" card for example? gym membership with his address at your place? I suppose he had a "personnummer" and was he registered at your address? You can ask Skatteverket for a personbevis listing all the previous addresses - we did that with my partner, to show that we were registered at the same address for a long time, and considered sambo by the Swedish Authorities. Most of the time, as you probably know, you can ask all the official documents in English, so you won't even have to translate any of that.
You have to establish somehow that you were living together for 12 months, if you can't do that, no matter what other proof of genuine relationship you have, you don't qualify, so it's 2 separate things: first you must prove that you are indeed common-law (12 months living together), then they will look at the relationship proofs ( and that's usually not a problem).
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