English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

and they might send me my visa or sent a denial. does someone ever experienced this? and what happened next? pls help tnx

2007-08-16 02:34:54 · 3 answers · asked by jhoo 2 in Travel Canada Other - Canada

3 answers

This is standard practice for all Embassies of all countries. If your application is not straight forward, through lack of evidential documented support and / or you could be a security risk and / or you pose a risk of not returning from that country, they will investigate further. Most Embassies require three months, so two months isn't that bad. During the investigation, if they discover that you have a criminal record, you are related to a criminal or you have been deported from a country in the past or, you have a close relative that has gone to another country, as a tourist and then claimed assylum, you will be rejected. If you are not aware of anything that could give the Canadian Government any concern, you should get the visa. You just have to wait! However, if there is any concern for the Canadian government and you are aware of it, you've just wasted your money. You will get your Passport posted to you and the Visa will be stamped inside the Passport. Otherwise, you'll receive a letter stating the rejection, with the Passport.

2007-08-16 02:50:54 · answer #1 · answered by kendavi 5 · 1 0

Sorry to tell you this, but it is not very good. But not really bad bad either :D Usually, the denial or the visa is given right on the spot, right after the interview. You have better have answered well to the "news" as this is also a part of them deciding whether you are eligible or not. What can you do? Nothing really...Just wait and hope.

http://www.cvtips.com/permit_to_work_in_Canada.html

2007-08-18 01:57:13 · answer #2 · answered by lilo 4 · 1 1

guess it means the consul wasn't sure about you. at the end of my parents' interview, they were told by the consul that they were approved and to just wait for the visas to come in the mail. during the time we were waiting for it, we began to make arrangements to sell our properties and prepare to move.

when i moved to the US, the consul also told me i was approved and that i was to wait for my visa to come in the mail as well.

so i don't know...

2007-08-17 09:13:32 · answer #3 · answered by Vanessa 5 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers