An affaire and liaison with Canadian visa counter
by K.S.Sivakumaran
I appreciate very much the films and documentaries produced in Canada , some of the outstanding works of fiction and criticism, and also a vibrating theatre movement in that country. My responses to these have appeared many times in Lankan newspapers both in English and Tamil during the past four decades or so. In fact, when I was a permanent resident in the US between 2002 and 2004, I had visited Toronto three times, two of such visits were on invitation to be honoured there.
appreciate very much the films and documentaries produced in Canada , some of the outstanding works of fiction and criticism, and also a vibrating theatre movement in that country. My responses to these have appeared many times in Lankan newspapers both in English and Tamil during the past four decades or so. In fact, when I was a permanent resident in the US between 2002 and 2004, I had visited Toronto three times, two of such visits were on invitation to be honoured there.During May 11-14, there was an International Conference on Tamil Studies organized by the English Departments of the Universities of Toronto and York. I was invited to register for the Conference, if interested. I did. Lankan born academic Chelva Kanaganayagam, who taught English in the University of Yaalpaanam is now Professor in English at the University of Toronto. He is a scholar. On enquiries, he was willing to give me four nights accommodation free during the seminar. Since I was interested in meeting and listening to some of the scholars participating in the Conference, I wanted to go to Canada and on my return visit Cincinnati in the US. I have many relatives and friends living in various parts of Canada.
I applied for a temporary visa to that extremely cold region producing all the documents required for admission to that country. But the Visa officer rejected my application on the following grounds: that I did not have sufficient funds to stay in Canada during my visit, that I would not return to Sri Lanka, that I have no permanent job in Sri Lanka, that I didn’t have any bank statements, and a letter from the employer indicating my monthly salary. Naturally I was disappointed because I submitted all the documents asked for along with my application.
How is it that the Visa officer did not duly pursue my application, when the visa counter clerks accepted my submission? I suspect foul play at the Visa Counter. Intentionally or otherwise, either one or all three of them at the desk seem to have juggled my application and documents before submitting to the Canadian officer. Those sitting at the counter were three local women. In the past, there had been many complaints against most local employees handling the visa applications in most of the foreign missions. The many letters written by distinguished Lankans on the misuse of power by local employees were published in the press. Even if the foreign employees would vie applications objectively, the locals could interfere in promoting their own interest. This had been spotlighted in the press now and then.
I had myself served as an FSN (Foreign Service National) in the then USIS in Colombo, as an Information Assistant along with well known journalists Dharmasena, Benedict Dodampegama, Gamage, Janaka Perera and Anthony Fernando in the Press section of the United States Information Service during the late 70s and early 80s. All of us did not earn a bad name for the institute we served.
At the visa counter in the Canadian embassy were three women busy working? I heard all of them speak in Tamil too — one with a Sinhala accent, another with a phoney accent, which was neither British nor American nor Lankan, and yet another who was busy typing. I have a feeling that the local ladies might have deliberately detached my relevant documents mentioned above, and merely submitted my application along with my passports (there was the old one and the new one). I do so because in the letter sent to me by the visa officer as a reply to my query why my application was rejected, there was no mention of the required documents I had submitted.
I strongly feel that an injustice had been committed by the Canadian embassy in rejecting my application for a temporary visa (I annexed a Bank Draft too for processing my application) by not carefully processing my documents. I feel sad because I missed an important conference relating to my academic and journalistic interests.
I hope that readers of this column would take notice of what had happened to me because among them might be academics and journalists, who could be faced with similar situations.
Even though the Canadian Embassy unjustly rejected my application for temporary visa to visit that country for a purpose, the US Embassy granted me a visa to visit the country. And I was in the US between May 08 and May 23, and returned safely and went back to teach as a permanent employee at a leading educational institution that is a gateway to progress and advancement. [Source: Island]

Victor :
May 31, 2006 @ 4:00 am
First of all I agree that there could be some foul play by the local staff, however I would like to point out my personal experience in this regard.
I am a Srilankan born Canadian citizen and a practicing physician. I migrated to Canada in early 90s. In late 80s, I applied to two universities (university of Ottawa and University of Toronto) to do elective medical rotation and was granted for one month each. During this time all the universities were closed in Srilanka due to JVP insurgency.
I have two outstanding individuals sponsored me in each locations and I submitted my application duly to the Canadian High Commission in Colombo. I had all the necessary documents, air tickets, letter from the vice chancellor, dean and sponsors. Yet, the officer name Robert Orr, who was known to reject all the visa applications told me after the interview that “After a careful consideration, my application was rejected” without giving a valid reason.
One of my sponsors was an influential individual in Ottawa and he spoke to then Foreign Sec. Joe Clark and the answer was, it was a local decision and they won’t interfere unless on a humanitarian basis.
Latter I came on a family re-union class (the officer who interviewed during this time was apologetic for the previous incident). This tells me one thing, there are some Canadian officers who are racist mind set (only few of them as many of them are good hearted) who can decide and has the power to decide who can and who cannot come to Canada as a visitor.
Ajith Dharma :
May 31, 2006 @ 4:31 am
Hi Siva, I am sorry actually what happened to you. I hope you are not implicating workers in the Canadian Embassy are Sinhalese and they deliberately did that. I invited my Brother and Mother to UK once and my brother did not get the visa. He blamed it squarely on Tamil interpreter and a Tamil visa support officers in UK embassy (he did not ask interpreter but my mother asked one since she had diffculty understanding visa officer) . Many of my Sinhalese friends blame Tamil workers in embassies for rejected Visas. May be some truth in it but not always. It is a known fact that most Local staff in these emabassies are either Tamil, Burgher or Muslim. There are very very few Sinhalese (I think it is either for command of English language or westerners perhaps want to give minorities more chance).
By the way the point is Visa officers have their allocations of granting visas and rejecting visas. Not so long ago they have arrested a western visa officer in Colombo for selling his allocation to a travel agency. He was rejecting outright any application submitted to him and he was caught. So it can be any of these reasons. I hope this officer will see the light next time.
Ajith
Su, Toronto,Ontario :
May 31, 2006 @ 2:32 pm
I agree. Some of the visa officers at the Canadian Embassy in colombo make their decisions without showing the proper sources of evidence that they used to base their decisons.