Need some advice or step to revoke Canadian PR. I got married last year, with a guy. He is an Indian Citizen. We did court marriage in India as well as the Tradition marriage in India as well as court marriage in Canada. He came to Canada with me on a visit visa and once he was here we applied for a PR through inland process. Few month's back he received his work permit status as well as we got called for an interview for his PR. Once the immigration officer told us that they will star the process for PR, he changed 360, with regular fights and on various occassion he told me that now I have to feed him and take care of him since I am his sponsor and according to the agreement i have to take care of him for next 3 years. During that time, we had a huge fight and I went after his PR Papers to tear, before i could get to it he took the papers and ran out of the house and call the cops on me and told them that I hit him. I now have a domestic assault case against me and i have been banned to enter my house or live with him or communicate with him. I had to engage a lawyer to fight my case. In a weeks time, he left me in this mess and has gone back to India. He has been trying to call me and has been successful in calling me, since we are not suppose to communicate, I have recorded his calls and notified the RCMP. He is waiting for me to get out of this trouble so he can return back. I have his PR Card that came by mail, but havent told him about it. He has taken his landed immigrant paper with him. He has openly told me that he has married me for PR. He has also not returned my jwellery that my parents gave at the time of wedding. His folks are very much involved in this. I have decided not to live with him and have told him that, but he has insisted that he will live seprately but I still have to take care of him financially as per the sponsorship agreement. I am Looking for some advice or help on how I can revoke his PR. Any help in this matter will be greatly appreciated....
You can't.
Actually - tampering with his mail is (I believe) a federal offense.
RevokeCanadaPR Wrote:Need some advice or step to revoke Canadian PR. I got married last year, with a guy. He is an Indian Citizen. We did court marriage in India as well as the Tradition marriage in India as well as court marriage in Canada. He came to Canada with me on a visit visa and once he was here we applied for a PR through inland process. Few month's back he received his work permit status as well as we got called for an interview for his PR. Once the immigration officer told us that they will star the process for PR, he changed 360, with regular fights and on various occassion he told me that now I have to feed him and take care of him since I am his sponsor and according to the agreement i have to take care of him for next 3 years. During that time, we had a huge fight and I went after his PR Papers to tear, before i could get to it he took the papers and ran out of the house and call the cops on me and told them that I hit him. I now have a domestic assault case against me and i have been banned to enter my house or live with him or communicate with him. I had to engage a lawyer to fight my case. In a weeks time, he left me in this mess and has gone back to India. He has been trying to call me and has been successful in calling me, since we are not suppose to communicate, I have recorded his calls and notified the RCMP. He is waiting for me to get out of this trouble so he can return back. I have his PR Card that came by mail, but havent told him about it. He has taken his landed immigrant paper with him. He has openly told me that he has married me for PR. He has also not returned my jwellery that my parents gave at the time of wedding. His folks are very much involved in this. I have decided not to live with him and have told him that, but he has insisted that he will live seprately but I still have to take care of him financially as per the sponsorship agreement. I am Looking for some advice or help on how I can revoke his PR. Any help in this matter will be greatly appreciated....
You cannot revoke his PR - once he is landed, he is a permanent resident and the only way he loses that is if he does not fulfill the residency requirement of being in Canada for two years of every five year period. As far as your obligations under the
sponsorship agreement you signed - you should read through it. It lays out the terms and is a legal contract, but they're not exactly as he says. The sponsored person
also has obligations under the agreement - it is not one sided - for example: even though the sponsor promises to provide for the basic requirements of the sponsored person (regardless of a breakdown of the relationship), the sponsored person also promises to "make every reasonable effort to provide for my own basic requirements". Basically, as a sponsor, what you're promising the government is that the sponsored person
will not have to apply for social assistance because of your failure to provide their basic requirements for food, shelter, etc., for three years.
By leaving Canada (especially without first receiving his PR card) he pretty much gave you the advantage. He can't collect social assistance when he's not in Canada, and his getting back to Canada will be complicated by the fact that he doesn't have his PR card. It won't stop him forever, because with his landing papers he can still get emergency travel documents, but it should delay his return for a while anyway. As far as "tampering with his mail" - his PR card was mailed to your address and he's not there. So what? You are under no obligation to forward that to him in India - your only obligation is to refrain from destroying it. THAT would be tampering.
My advice:
get a divorce lawyer and file for divorce immediately on the grounds of fraud. Your objective at this point should be to minimize collateral damage and move on with your life. You can't keep him out of Canada indefinitely, but you can keep him away from you and, hopefully, the divorce settlement will negotiate issues like the jewelry, and especially yours
and his obligations under the sponsorship agreement.