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dgeorge

Hero Member
Feb 2, 2020
645
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hey guys, i have my older sister living in canada and she is a canadian citizen. i have received my ita where i answered yes for "sibling in canada" and received points for that. what kind of proof do i have to show? Where will they check if the parents name is same? because in her canadian passport, her parents name isnt mentioned. Can someone help with this issue. thanks
 
hey guys, i have my older sister living in canada and she is a canadian citizen. i have received my ita where i answered yes for "sibling in canada" and received points for that. what kind of proof do i have to show? Where will they check if the parents name is same? because in her canadian passport, her parents name isnt mentioned. Can someone help with this issue. thanks
This has been answered in two different other posts.

You have already mentioned you DON'T actually have a sister living in Canada who is a Citizen, you have an aunt who you consider a sister.

That is not how things work! The fact that you keep creating threads trying to convince yourself that your reasoning is right and somehow acceptable to IRCC is not going to change reality.

You would need to prove that this person is your sibling (either by blood, marriage or adoption), and it is your onus to provide this evidence. Evidently you will not be able to do so unless you lie or forge documents which you should not really even think of because that is only going to earn you more trouble.

Just go back to the pool and wait for an ITA with your real score or try to improve. Don't try to make stuff up to sneak some undeserved points.
 
They ask for a lot of documentation for the sibling in Canada.

You need to provide documentation that you have the same biological parents, and be able to establish this unequivocally.

There is zero chance they will accept an aunt as a sibling, and you might get slapped with a misrepresentation charge and a 5 year ban.

Trust me on this, no way you finesse your way past this.

Just decline the ITA if you don't qualify without the 15 points, and re-enter the pool.
 
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They ask for a lot of documentation for the sibling in Canada.

You need to provide documentation that you have the same biological parents, and be able to establish this unequivocally.

There is zero chance they will accept an aunt as a sibling, and you might get slapped with a misrepresentation charge and a 5 year ban.

Trust me on this, no way you finesse your way past this.

Just decline the ITA if you don't qualify without the 15 points, and re-enter the pool.
Doing that, thanks again