dual citizenship and mistake (for Mr. James Mcafee)
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
Dear Sir,
I have valid student authorisation, and I'm a student in Canada. I am a citizen of
two countries (non of them is Canada). One where I was born, lived for whole my life
and the other where I've been only once for 5 days to visit my relatives and which
citizenship I obtained two years ago "by blood". I have never asked for passport or
ID of that country, the only document I have is certificate of citizeship.
When I was applying for student authorisation, I mentioned just one citizenship, later
on I realized that I made omition. It wasn't asked to mention both citizenship, and I
wrote the citizenship of the country which passport I posses.
What should I do now? Did I made a serious mistake?
If I apply for immigration and mention both of citizenships, will I be removed from
Canada, since I made omition in student autorisation form?
Thank You for your answer Mirko
I have valid student authorisation, and I'm a student in Canada. I am a citizen of
two countries (non of them is Canada). One where I was born, lived for whole my life
and the other where I've been only once for 5 days to visit my relatives and which
citizenship I obtained two years ago "by blood". I have never asked for passport or
ID of that country, the only document I have is certificate of citizeship.
When I was applying for student authorisation, I mentioned just one citizenship, later
on I realized that I made omition. It wasn't asked to mention both citizenship, and I
wrote the citizenship of the country which passport I posses.
What should I do now? Did I made a serious mistake?
If I apply for immigration and mention both of citizenships, will I be removed from
Canada, since I made omition in student autorisation form?
Thank You for your answer Mirko
#2
Guest
Posts: n/a
[email protected] asked if he would get in trouble with Canadian immigration authorities
because he mentioned only one of his two citizenships (the citizenship corresponding to
his passport) when he was applying for a student authorization.
I doubt this would create any sort of problem at all. Does anyone else out there
think it would?
Rich Wales [email protected] http://www.webcom.com/richw/
*NOTE: I've lived in both Canada and the US and have dual citizenship.
*DISCLAIMER: I am not a lawyer, professional immigration consultant,
or consular officer. My comments are for discussion purposes only and
are not intended to be relied upon as legal or professional advice.
because he mentioned only one of his two citizenships (the citizenship corresponding to
his passport) when he was applying for a student authorization.
I doubt this would create any sort of problem at all. Does anyone else out there
think it would?
Rich Wales [email protected] http://www.webcom.com/richw/
*NOTE: I've lived in both Canada and the US and have dual citizenship.
*DISCLAIMER: I am not a lawyer, professional immigration consultant,
or consular officer. My comments are for discussion purposes only and
are not intended to be relied upon as legal or professional advice.
#3
Guest
Posts: n/a
FWIW, mentioning my dual nationality on the form didn't delay my application for a
work visa.
Derek
Rich Wales wrote:
>
> [email protected] asked if he would get in trouble with Canadian immigration
> authorities because he mentioned only one of his two citizenships (the citizenship
> corresponding to his passport) when he was applying for a student authorization.
>
> I doubt this would create any sort of problem at all. Does anyone else out there think
> it would?
>
> Rich Wales [email protected] http://www.webcom.com/richw/
> *NOTE: I've lived in both Canada and the US and have dual citizenship.
> *DISCLAIMER: I am not a lawyer, professional immigration consultant,
> or consular officer. My comments are for discussion purposes only and
> are not intended to be relied upon as legal or professional advice.
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dr. Derek R. Oliver - SPM Group Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering,
University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada
work visa.
Derek
Rich Wales wrote:
>
> [email protected] asked if he would get in trouble with Canadian immigration
> authorities because he mentioned only one of his two citizenships (the citizenship
> corresponding to his passport) when he was applying for a student authorization.
>
> I doubt this would create any sort of problem at all. Does anyone else out there think
> it would?
>
> Rich Wales [email protected] http://www.webcom.com/richw/
> *NOTE: I've lived in both Canada and the US and have dual citizenship.
> *DISCLAIMER: I am not a lawyer, professional immigration consultant,
> or consular officer. My comments are for discussion purposes only and
> are not intended to be relied upon as legal or professional advice.
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dr. Derek R. Oliver - SPM Group Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering,
University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada