canadian permanent residency in Ireland |
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cor-32
Junior Member Joined: 10 Mar 2011 Location: canada Status: Offline Points: 90 |
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Posted: 06 Oct 2011 at 11:37am |
You might want to take down the number......
You want a passport for the child dont you? If she can go back to her own country for a passport, why does she need to be seeking assylum in Ireland?
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abel1
New Member Joined: 04 Oct 2011 Status: Offline Points: 7 |
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for your information,this is the health insurance number I was using:1454775
you can call the insurance AVIVA to confirm if you are sure (they still own me some money)...to let you know that not everyone live on social
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abel1
New Member Joined: 04 Oct 2011 Status: Offline Points: 7 |
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are we talking of the same topic?did I tell you I want my child to be Irish?That is exactly the problem I am having....I am concern my child could have anyrhing to do with place called Ireland or whatever...so Relax, ok?
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cor-32
Junior Member Joined: 10 Mar 2011 Location: canada Status: Offline Points: 90 |
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Did you work in Ireland as a student? - so how did ye pay the HSE? If you are so concerned, why not go take out VHI/Aviva to pay the medical bills?
the child will not be Irish - unless she is adopted by irish
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abel1
New Member Joined: 04 Oct 2011 Status: Offline Points: 7 |
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read very well before you make any comment....I am not hunting for an Irish passport,I do not need an irish passport,ok?
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abel1
New Member Joined: 04 Oct 2011 Status: Offline Points: 7 |
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How do you know we where using HSE without paying? Did HSE provide any services for international student FREE of Charge? if yes what are they? When you are not inform about any topic just stay out of it
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abel1
New Member Joined: 04 Oct 2011 Status: Offline Points: 7 |
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Thank you so much for the advice.
I can assure you that we did not live together or share the same address in the pass. she live in the hostelle provided by the government and I live in the rented house as a student. the baby also was unexpected and now I really need that baby to be born and I am just trying to find the right thing to do without too much mistake. In the situation that I am into now,should I contact an immigration office here in canada and let them know that I was just informed by my GF of the case of pregnancy or should I wait till the baby is born?(she is just 7 weeks pregnant)?
thank you
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cor-32
Junior Member Joined: 10 Mar 2011 Location: canada Status: Offline Points: 90 |
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BTW - thanks to both of ye for using the HSE without paying anything to Ireland
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cor-32
Junior Member Joined: 10 Mar 2011 Location: canada Status: Offline Points: 90 |
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I am Irish and i can tell you that unless the mother of the child has alot of money to invest in Ireland, with alot of jobs attached, or that the childs GRANDPARENTS, as well as PARENTS are Irish citizens, she won't be getting an Irish passport.
That door was closed a few years back because of the amount of people arriving in from UK through NI (same country, the border to the Republic is well inland from the ferry). Good luck on your hunt for an Iris passport holder. Just because the baby is born in the Republic, does not mean it is Irish
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dpenabill
Top Member Joined: 29 Nov 2009 Status: Offline Points: 6407 |
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I am not sure what you are getting at in your references to recognizing the baby. But, whatever the facts are, those are the facts. While the facts can be massaged to some extent, to do so is risky. The facts are not something to play games with.
I do not know your facts. From what I have seen, before any of the other procedural (how-to) questions can be addressed, you need to be sure about a key question, a key fact: the nature of your relationship to your GF prior to and right up to the date you landed in Canada (assuming you are now a landed immigrant, now a PR). If you are the father of the child, there is no playing games with that: you will have to disclose this. If you are not the father of the child there is no playing games with that either: you cannot claim to be the father if you are not. There are nuances. Sure, you can delay making a declaration of paternity, but that will not change any of the underlying facts and could, actually, raise questions later if later you do claim to be the father. Conversely, if it is claimed that the father is someone else, that is going to raise a range of other questions about the relationship. Bottom-line regarding paternity and prior living arrangements: you have to be honest and forthcoming. There really is no way around that, no way that is likely to work for you anyway. You are stuck with the facts that exist. Regarding your relationship; to be clear: if you did NOT live together with your girlfriend, there is NOT much to worry about. Of course all the other facts in your PR application process and all the facts in the sponsored partner application for her (you must be married or qualify for common-law in order to sponsor her) must be consistent with this: so, for example, if there is some overlap in the respective address history for each of you respectively indicating you both lived at the same address for some period of time, well, that is not consistent with claiming to never have lived together prior to your coming to Canada to land. But, again, if you did NOT live together before you landed in Canada, NO problem. If you did live together, though, that's a potential problem on a large scale. You cannot massage the facts to avoid this problem. You need to see a lawyer about this. No one here can advise you through this if this problem exists for you. A lot is at stake, again, including not only the potential for a lifetime ban on ever sponsoring her as well as, possibly, but the prospect of your own PR being revoked for failing to disclose the relationship. This is a common problem. Many make mistakes in this regard, especially given how long it takes to obtain the PR visa and the fact that life changes during the processing time, especially for younger people. In any event, how to go about things generally if there is no problem regarding cohabitation and inferences of a common-law relationship, is actually fairly straight-forward (though the need for a qualified travel document can be a complicating factor, that is something that can usually be resolved). You go to Ireland and get married and sponsor her, timing the actual submission of application depending on when the child is due, if soon wait until the birth and then submit the application sponsoring both. But you really need to answer the key question first: did you live together, and if so, SEE A LAWYER. It is that simple. You need to see a lawyer if you lived together before you came to Canada. |
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Bureaucracy is what bureaucracy does, or When in doubt, follow the instructions. Otherwise, follow the instructions.
BTW: Not an expert, not a Can. lawyer, never worked in immigration |
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