I have another question, when we have to mention our travel history.. I guess we mention every country we have entered and exited in the last 10 years? Am I correct on this?
But I have a different situation, my wife is a cabin crew ! She flies to different countries (for a couple of days) every month.. and if we have to give them this data for the last 10 years it would be a long list.. or rather we may not be able to get hold of this past data.
So for this, what is the ideal information to be given?
There is one thing, every time my spouse enters a country as a crew, her passport is not stamped, it's only scanned.
I would mention all the countries that are 'stamped' within her passport within your travel history. Be sure to scan all those pages to.
Then in your LOE state your wife is Cabin crew and explain the situation and list the countries there if you wish
I assume her company / HR should have her full flight history. If she can get that you can enter 30-35 entries online, and the rest in an LOE. Good luck.
Yes correct, I understand. I will be able to get her roaster for previous 2-3 months .. but once again, for cabin crew they only scan passport and do not stamp it as their stay never exceeds 76 hours.
However I would scan all the pages .. and give an explanation in the LoE..
Also do we need to give a chronological sequence of travel history or only passport scan shall suffice..
I have another question, when we have to mention our travel history.. I guess we mention every country we have entered and exited in the last 10 years? Am I correct on this?
But I have a different situation, my wife is a cabin crew ! She flies to different countries (for a couple of days) every month.. and if we have to give them this data for the last 10 years it would be a long list.. or rather we may not be able to get hold of this past data.
So for this, what is the ideal information to be given?
There is one thing, every time my spouse enters a country as a crew, her passport is not stamped, it's only scanned.
I am not cabin crew, but a guy who likes to travel so my passport is full of visas, I decided to give all details, yes it was time consuming and painful but I recommend you do that, jara si pareshani, zindegi bhar asani. Btw, congrats on having a gorgeous wife (since the cabin crew girls in India are gorgeous).
@midnightfalcon Hi, I'm facing this same issue. What did you actually end up submitting to IRCC? Did you submit your wife's roster/employment travel history or did you submit only dates stamped in her passport?
My wife has been working as a cabin crew for 10 years and I don't think I can get this information from her employers.
@midnightfalcon Hi, I'm facing this same issue. What did you actually end up submitting to IRCC? Did you submit your wife's roster/employment travel history or did you submit only dates stamped in her passport?
My wife has been working as a cabin crew for 10 years and I don't think I can get this information from her employers.
Hi, @midnightfalcon@singh0216 and my wife are in same situation, only difference is that both of us worked as crew for several years, what was your solution??
please advice
Here's my suggestion and it worked for my application:
In the travel history for your wife, you only have to enter the travel details for the stamps in her passport. Make sure it's thorough. Also, request from her employer her travel history for work, if the employer doesn't provide it, then, include a letter of explanation to IRCC that states that your wife is a crew and a frequent traveller and it's impossible for you to get her complete history.
You'll also have to get PCC for all countries where your wife has lived for more than 6 months. You should only send PCC and medicals once requested because they are time-sensitive and can expire in the immigration process, which will lead IRCC to re-request it, costing you time, energy and resources.