

“Twenty-eight months?” said Ottawa immigration lawyer Julie Taub, who is not involved in the case. The uncertainty, she says, makes it impossible for her to get on with her life, or for Rahimi to make even medium-term plans in Germany - expecting, as he does, to soon uproot for North America. She said her husband, who speaks little English, mistakenly thinks she is not doing enough at her end to make his immigration proceed.
28 MONTHS LATER UPDATE 2017 HOW TO
“I’m tired of this situation and I don’t know how to handle it.”

“Every day, my life is fighting and crying,” said Fathoullahnejad, who has a 10-year-old daughter at home, no steady work and few funds for regular European visits. An ocean apart - a rocky start for any marriage. I cannot handle this anymore.” The story has several twists and turns but the bottom-line is easy to read: after marrying Taher Rahimi, 42, in Denmark in February 2015, they’ve only spent a handful of weeks together. “I’m so confused,” she said recently, sorting through documents at her kitchen table. Desperate for answers, Gholi Fathoullahnejad, 46, appealed to the Sun and her MP for help after months of frustrating silence from officials at Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada. Manage Print Subscription / Tax ReceiptĪn Aylmer woman has tried for 28 months to get her Kurdish husband into Canada - a delay casting doubt on their whole future - just as the immigration department has been crowing about a speedier spousal unification process.
