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GodWin4ever

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Mar 10, 2016
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It has been 2 years since I started process of requesting a refugee protection. I failed RPD then RAD which also failed now I also didn’t get approved for leave to Judicial Review. I wanted to ask what’s the next step after this?
Your help are really appreciated!
Thanks
 
To be quite honest, you should be getting prepared to leave Canada. Your removal order is now in force and you should expect a deportation order if you don’t leave in about 30 days. Since you have had a negative finding from irb in the last year, you aren’t eligible to apply for H&C. Expect IRCC/CBSA to move relatively quickly at this point in time to remove you from Canada.
 
It has been 2 years since I started process of requesting a refugee protection. I failed RPD then RAD which also failed now I also didn’t get approved for leave to Judicial Review. I wanted to ask what’s the next step after this?
Your help are really appreciated!
Thanks

It would appear that your next contact will be from the CBSA to see if you are eligible to apply for a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) or to make arrangements for your departure from Canada, if the PRRA isn't available. If you are eligible for a PRRA then you really need to get busy on that. https://www.canada.ca/en/immigratio...usal-options/pre-removal-risk-assessment.html
 
It would appear that your next contact will be from the CBSA to see if you are eligible to apply for a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA)

OP probably isn’t eligible, based on their previous post timeline, due to the one year bar.
 
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To be quite honest, you should be getting prepared to leave Canada. Your removal order is now in force and you should expect a deportation order if you don’t leave in about 30 days. Since you have had a negative finding from irb in the last year, you aren’t eligible to apply for H&C. Expect IRCC/CBSA to move relatively quickly at this point in time to remove you from Canada.

What about if they force him to leave the country, but he doesn’t leave? What can they do?
 
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What about if they force him to leave the country, but he doesn’t leave? What can they do?
Arrest him and physically place him on an aircraft to his country of citizenship.... This is a common scenario and they are well equipped to handle it. His papers would be held by the aircrew.
 
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What about if they force him to leave the country, but he doesn’t leave? What can they do?
If he refuses to appear for removal and goes into hiding then they will issue a Canada-wide warrant for his arrest. Once he is arrested he will be detained and the CBSA will likely look to do an escorted removal where a couple of them take him home (perhaps in chains). Refusing to leave happens all of the time, just as arrests, detention and escorted removals happen all of the time.

Any limited generosity Canada extends to refugee claimants ends once it is determined that the person does not meet the definition - the person is now simply the subject of a removal order if all of the legal remedies to remain in Canada have been exhausted. You can leave on your own accord or the CBSA will arrange everything for you.

If you enjoy being arrested and frog-marched through airports with a jacket over your cuffed wrists then refusing to leave is your best option.
 
But I know some people who have waited for CBSA to contact them for more than 5 years. They applied for H&C and still waiting!!
 
But I know some people who have waited for CBSA to contact them for more than 5 years. They applied for H&C and still waiting!!

"It depends" should be the motto for any immigration process. Where are you from - where in Canada are you currently - what are the health, destination or criminal concerns with regard to the practicality of any removal? Is there a moratorium on removals to that country, are there any international frictions where travel documents just cannot be obtained? There are lots of questions that need to be answered before starting the removal process.

There are lots of similarly situated people who have intensely different circumstances - a homemaker who doesn't face any risk upon return versus a self-exiled union leader who isn't a Convention refugee but will face a risk to his life for some criminal linkage (for example). Some countries are simply too dangerous currently and they don't remove people there unless they're a danger to the public in Canada.

Comparing immigration cases is irresistible but you cannot count on being treated just like somebody else because you cannot know the subtler differences in your lives.
 
And that would bring about the concern of a marriage of convienience (which it would be). And that still wouldn’t stop a deportation if IRCC/CBSA decide to peruse the OPs removal proceedings.
 
There is an option, since you were in Canada couldn't u find a true love for yourself ? Think about it.


If they did thar its red flags