I am sorry if I am being paranoid and repetitive, but I just need to shake off this shred of doubt:
I am post-ITA and about to submit documents to CIC. Could someone please confirm that I don't need to scan notarized copies of documents such as passport or marriage certificate which are both in English/French and in my country's native language? I am asking because both in FSW 2014 and in OINP application, they asked for notarized copies regardless of whether the document was in English/French or not.
I am sorry if I am being paranoid and repetitive, but I just need to shake off this shred of doubt:
I am post-ITA and about to submit documents to CIC. Could someone please confirm that I don't need to scan notarized copies of documents such as passport or marriage certificate which are both in English/French and in my country's native language? I am asking because both in FSW 2014 and in OINP application, they asked for notarized copies regardless of whether the document was in English/French or not.
If you are providing the translation, only in that case you have to get it notarized.
However, If your document is already in English + Your native language then just the scan of originals will suffice
I am sorry if I am being paranoid and repetitive, but I just need to shake off this shred of doubt:
I am post-ITA and about to submit documents to CIC. Could someone please confirm that I don't need to scan notarized copies of documents such as passport or marriage certificate which are both in English/French and in my country's native language? I am asking because both in FSW 2014 and in OINP application, they asked for notarized copies regardless of whether the document was in English/French or not.
If you're uploading scans of original documents, I don't see why you would need to make a notarized copy and then scan that copy when you can scan the original. Notarized copies are requested when you can't send the original physically - usually that's the case when you send a certified true copy to be translated.
If you are scanning the original letter, then you don't need to provide a notarized true copy. Some people have the signature on the reference letter notarized, though - but that's a completely different thing from notarizing a certified true copy.