+x@AB2014 I have read information from canada website about Deemed Rehabilitation but I cannot figure out if I need to apply for this (or even for the information-only one) if I am trying to claim entry under the UK ROA, or if I should reapply for an eTA and select "yes" to the question of convictions. I have had an eTA refused before so I don't know if is automatically refused in that case. It's all very confusing. All the "Deemed Rehabilitation" stuff seems to refer to the canadian process where they assess you under their own criteria, as they do for nationals of every other country. But for UK Nationals, I am confused as to whether this actually applies or if it is bypassed based on the UK legislation. Any help would be much appreciated. As I understand it, if you are deemed rehabilitated then you are no longer criminally inadmissible. It depends mostly on whether your convcition is spent, but also partly on what the maximum sentence would have been in Canada. According to Unlock's information, there is a process where you can ask the Canadian High Commission whether you are deemed rehabilitated. If you fill in the application form and tick the box marked "for information only", you won't have to pay the fee but you will still get an answer. I can't be sure, but I'm guessing that the way these things usually go is that once you're turned down for an eTA, you won't get one, but at some point you might get a visa. So, if they tell you that you are now deemed rehabilitated, then you might still have to apply for a visa. It has just occurred to me that as you are in Scotland, the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act has been updated/replaced, so your conviction might become spent sooner than it would in England, under the law here, which is the one they specify. That might still be an issue, depending on the details.
=========================================================================================================
If you are to punish a man retributively you must injure him. If you are to reform him you must improve him. And men are not improved by injuries. (George Bernard Shaw)
|