Misrepresentation in immigration
documents for Canada
Canada has started the new Express
Entry migration program from 1st January 2015.
Many Indians want to settle down in
Canada, a prosperous and peaceful country. While applying for Canada migration,
one has to be very careful about the documentation.
Please avoid
the temptation to submit false or fake documents while applying for the
migration. Document Fraud (Misrepresentation): It is a serious crime to
lie, or to send false information or documents, when you deal with Citizenship
and Immigration Canada (CIC). This is fraud. It is called “misrepresentation.”
Document
fraud can involve either false or altered documents, such as: Passports and
travel documents, visas, diplomas, degrees, and apprenticeship or trade papers,
birth, marriage, final divorce, annulment, separation or death certificates,
and police certificates.
If
you lie on an application or in an interview with a CIC officer, this is also
fraud and a crime. If you send false documents or information, CIC will refuse
your application. You could also:
·
Be forbidden
to enter Canada for at least five years,
·
Have a
permanent record of fraud with CIC,
·
Have your
status as a permanent resident or Canadian citizen taken away,
·
Be charged
with a crime or
·
Be removed
from Canada.
What
CIC is doing to stop immigration fraud?
CIC works with our partners to monitor document fraud and train officers around the world. Partners include:
CIC works with our partners to monitor document fraud and train officers around the world. Partners include:
·
he Canada
Border Services Agency (CBSA),
·
The Royal Canadian
Mounted Police (RCMP) and
·
Foreign police
services and offices that issue identity documents.
CIC is working
with the CBSA and the RCMP to phase in biometrics. This means we will use data
such as fingerprints to confirm a person’s identity.
I am a member
of the Immigration Consultants of Canada Regulatory Council (ICCRC ID R422575)
and Australian migration department has given him offshore agent id 3000526.
I have also passed the migration institute of Australia's (MIA)
examination about migration law.
No comments:
Post a Comment