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forumSection: Moving to Canada from the U.S., subForumSection: Permanent Residence in Canada
Hi everyone, I am asking this question on behalf of a friend. I have tried to read all threads on this but not sure if it has been addressed recently. So, this friend had a US visitor visa in the past (3 years ago), he claimed asylum with his family under safe third-country exception, and got approved. The US consulate in his home country, wrote an email that they've cancelled his B1/B2 visa few weeks after making the claim. Would there be any reason why he will be deny a US visiting visa, if he wishes to visit State now that he is a Permanent Resident of Canada?
Hi everyone, I am asking this question on behalf of a friend. I have tried to read all threads on this but not sure if it has been addressed recently. So, this friend had a US visitor visa in the past (3 years ago), he claimed asylum with his family under safe third-country exception, and got approved. The US consulate in his home country, wrote an email that they've cancelled his B1/B2 visa few weeks after making the claim. Would there be any reason why he will be deny a US visiting visa, if he wishes to visit State now that he is a Permanent Resident of Canada?
Approval of the B1/B2 is certainly not guaranteed.
Yes - it's possible the US visa may be refused if they feel he lacks ties and given his immigration history and the fact a previous B1/B2 was cancelled. Or he may be approved without issue. He will want to show strong ties to Canada (job, property, assets).
Approval of the B1/B2 is certainly not guaranteed.
Yes - it's possible the US visa may be refused if they feel he lacks ties and given his immigration history and the fact a previous B1/B2 was cancelled. Or he may be approved without issue. He will want to show strong ties to Canada (job, property, assets).
OK, will let him know. Thou, he's a university student, and work part-time and a PR. Alternatively, maybe he should wait until he becomes a Canadian citizen. I guess, his previous B1/B2 was cancelled because he claim asylum in Canada via US-Canada border.
OK, will let him know. Thou, he's a university student, and work part-time and a PR. Alternatively, maybe he should wait until he becomes a Canadian citizen. I guess, his previous B1/B2 was cancelled because he claim asylum in Canada via US-Canada border.
He can certainly try applying now - he should just be aware that approval is not guaranted.
I assumed his B1/B2 was cancelled because of the asylum claim. If it was cancelled for a different reason, then reapplying may be more difficult / complicated. Did he overstay in the US beyond his allowed stay before coming to Canada? If so, for how long?
He can certainly try applying now - he should just be aware that approval is not guaranted.
I assumed his B1/B2 was cancelled because of the asylum claim. If it was cancelled for a different reason, then reapplying may be more difficult / complicated. Did he overstay in the US beyond his allowed stay before coming to Canada? If so, for how long?
No, he never did for once. He was a frequent traveller to the US, with more than three multiple 2 years visas. But, because his wife was already in Canada waiting for tribunal hearing of her claim and had a Canadian born kid. He decided to join them, legally through immigration at the land POE. The counterfoil hasn't been physically cancelled, though now expired. I guess, US immigration don't want him to come back, should he lost the clam then.
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