Spouses and common-law
partners sponsored to immigrate to Canada will no longer experience a period of
conditional permanent resident status. Instead, they will have full permanent
resident status upon landing, according to reports on Canadian Immigration News.
The removal of the
conditional permanent residence provision was confirmed by Immigration,
Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) on April 28, 2017.
By eliminating the
condition, the Liberal government said that it was addressing concerns that
vulnerable sponsored spouses or partners may stay in abusive relationships
because they are afraid of losing their permanent resident status, even though
an exception to the condition existed for those types of situations. Abuse may
be physical, sexual, psychological, and/or financial.
The condition had
originally been introduced by the previous Conservative government in October,
2012 as a means to deter people from seeking to immigrate to Canada through
non-genuine relationships.
While the current government
admits that cases of marriage fraud may exist, it also states that ‘the
majority of relationships are genuine and most spousal sponsorship applications
are made in good faith,’ adding that ‘eliminating conditional permanent
residence upholds the Government’s commitment to family reunification and
supports gender equality and combating gender violence.’
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