Canadian immigration minister Jason Kenney has confirmed that about 150 people
will be granted permanent Canadian resident status
after a computer error led to them incorrectly being given immigrant
visas.
The error came to light when a Moroccan family arrived at
Montreal airport on Friday 16th November 2012 believing that they had been
granted Canadian permanent resident visas. At the airport they were told that
the visas were invalid. A check has revealed that a computer error led to them
being told that they had visas. The Canadian government accepts that they flew
to Canada in good faith.
The government says that similar errors have
been made in the cases of about 50 applicants under the Federal Skilled Worker
Program who are now entitled to bring their immediate family with them. A total
of about 150 people are affected. Mr Kenney said 'I think it would be
fundamentally unfair to the people who have received visas, who wrapped up their
affairs in their home country, acted in good faith, some apparently have come to
Canada, to tell them to
leave.'
The FSWP applicants all applied before February 27th 2008. In
June 2012, Mr Kenney announced that he was going to annul all applications to
the FSWP made before that date in an effort to get rid of the backlog of cases
in the system.
However, a computer error led to letters being sent to
the 50 applicants saying that their applications had been approved. Mr Kenney
told journalists that it was right that Canadian immigration should now grant
visas to those affected. He also said that it was not surprising that some
errors were made from time to time.
Mr Kenney said that his
department, Citizenship and Immigration Canada, had installed a new computer
system which had some teething problems. 'We make over 2 million decisions a
year; about 7,000 a day. We are making a major IT change so I think it's
understandable that a small error of this nature would be made' he said. He said
that all those who were to be granted permanent resident visas because of the
computer error had passed their security screening.
In June 2012, Mr
Kenney announced that about 280,000 applicants under the FSWP who had applied
before February 28th 2008 would have their application fees returned. He said
that their applications would not now be considered and, if they wanted to enter
Canada under the FSWP, they would have to apply again. Many of those applicants
have launched class action legal proceedings against the Canadian
government.
Jenny Sims, who speaks on immigration for the Canadian
opposition New Democratic Party, said that she welcomed Mr Kenney's decision to
grant permanent resident visas to those affected by the computer error but said
'the real mistake was the deletion of all those files in a very unfair
manner.'
The first hearing in the cases in the class action brought by people
whose pre-2008 applications were annulled will be held before Christmas this
year.
Global Visa Support offers a variety of programs in Canada. Please visit our
Canadian page for more details: http://www.globalvisasupport.com/canada.html
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