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Stinky

Newbie
Feb 21, 2013
4
1
Hello
I've planned to get married in June 2013. My fiance is currently living in Iraq , and I'm looking at starting a spouse sponsorship application right after our marriage, but I've been looking at the processing time for the Visa Office in Amman-Jordan and it's 19 months :o
This is already worrying me, is there a change that she could get the visa within 6 months or so ?

Anyone have some recommendation as to what type of sponsorship is required, a friend of mine recommended a Foreign Student application just because he said it takes approx about 6 months total.

Thanks
 
Some cases are faster than the timeline on the website, as it's the time that it takes to process 80% of the application. So if your case is straightforward, and your application complete, you might be done faster. But yes - it takes a long time, and there is no other visa that takes shorter time.

You could try and get her to Canada on a student visa, and then sponsor her inland (see the first thread by Leon about spousal sponsorship), she would be allowed to stay in Canada with you until the application is processed ( and current inland is 6 + 8 months : 14 months, so it's faster than Amman). However, to get a student visa, she would have to prove that she will go back to her country... and has strong ties to Iraq.

Good luck,
Sweden
 
Thanks for the reply Sweden

Do you have any idea about the rejection % with the Student Visa, or is it just a matter of getting an acceptance letter from a college in Canada ?

Thanks
 
Stinky said:
Thanks for the reply Sweden

Do you have any idea about the rejection % with the Student Visa, or is it just a matter of getting an acceptance letter from a college in Canada ?

Thanks

If you read through the International Students section of this forum you'll see there are plenty of rejections for Student Visas. It's not just a matter of getting an acceptance letter from a college in Canada. You also have to convince CIC you are a genuine student. Common reasons for refusals are insufficient funds, lack of ties to home country (CIC believes the applicant has plans to remain in Canada long term) and study mis-match (the studies the applicant is planning to pursue in Canada don't make sense based on that applicant's previous studies and/or work experience).