Newlywed Mississauga couple could be forced apart because of immigration processing delays
CBC
A newlywed Mississauga man could find himself forced apart from the woman he just married as he waits for his Canadian permanent residency application to be approved amid immigration processing backlogs.
Ahmed Emam, 31, was just married last month and has been planning a summer wedding celebration in Egypt, where he was born.
There's just one problem: If Emam goes, he might not be allowed back into Canada.
And with his application still waiting to be green-lit, there's a chance he'll be forced to return to Egypt even if he cancels the celebration — unless he's approved to stay soon.
"You can stay hopeful until a point in time, but after that, you're done. You don't know what to do," Emam told CBC News.
Emam has been waiting for his permanent residency application to be approved for two and a half years now. He's been in the country since 2018, first arriving as an international student to complete a masters at the University of Toronto, then working as a data engineer.
He's currently on a work permit set to expire in July and now nervously wonders if he will be separated from his wife Bassant as he awaits word on his application.
"I have been living here... I have a life, right? I have a social network," he said. "What's going to happen to my wife? Are we going to stay away and apart for, like, a year until the IRCC decides that, hey, we're done with the application?"
Both Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada as well as an immigration lawyer not connected with this case say Emam is far from alone in experiencing years-long processing times. It's unclear how many are in Emam's situation, but the IRCC says 46 per cent of applications are not being processed within its service standards.
That's left some, including Emam, running low on hope.
Emam says he's invested thousands of dollars into Canada but despite doing everything right, he feels his application isn't being processed justly. He also says he's seen his friends' applications processed faster.
At his wits' end and on the advice of a lawyer, this past January, Emam submitted a second application to stay in the country, through the Canadian Experience Class — a program for those with at least one year of eligible skilled work experience in Canada. With his permanent residency application languishing, the hope was to gain status through a different pathway.
Emam says he and his MP — Michael Coteau, who represents the Don Valley East riding — have requested updates about his file, which have indicated that he is eligible for the program.
But the status update on the IRCC website shows the department hasn't completed all of the necessary steps such as checking for a criminal record. And there's no mechanism to accelerate the processing times, he says.