Why has my visa application to Canada been denied, and what can I do about it? [closed]










3















My name is Dennis Whole Asante, I am a pastor and the General-Overseer of a church here in Nairobi, Kenya, I am also a Ghanaian and a residence of Kenya. I have all my documents as a legal residence here in Kenya. A friend of mine who is also like a brother, we have been friends for more than 15 years now, he is also a Ghanaian and we are still neighbors living at the same neighborhood in Ghana. He has invited me to visit him in Canada and provided all his documents including his statement of accounts, his residence permit, his tax clearance and every other necessary documents to prove his legality over there in Canada. I also applied for the Visa and also attached my statement of account even in Ghana and other documents needed that will enable me get the visa. As I submitted my application I was denied the visa by two reasons



  1. Purpose of Travel

  2. Family Ties in Canada and my home country

Those were the first reasons for my refusal, I then reapplied by providing an affidavit stating about my ties here because I also live here in Kenya with my wife and son, Provided a copy of the Tenancy agreement of my church rent which I pay 65,000 Kenyan Shillings which is about 650 US Dollars, Photos of my church, and other necessary documents to prove my ties here in my country of residence, I also provided my two bank statements of accounts from two banks here in Kenya and still added my Ghana stament of account which has more than 200,000 US dollars. I was also able to state my purpose of travel which I also added a letter from a church I will even be ministering as a guest speaker.



To my surprise my application have been refused again by giving me three different reasons from the first one and the reasons are:



  1. Travel History

  2. Purpose of Travel

  3. Personal assets and financial status

But when it comes to travel History, I attached even my already finished passport with Visas of South Africa, Zambia, Uganda, Malaysia, Nigeria, Rwanda which I travelled to all and returned to my home country and even in my new passport there are still other visas including an Israeli Visa which I travelled and returned few weeks ago. I only travel for only preaching appointments and I still return to my either home country or my country of residence so I don’t understand Travel History was marked as one of the reasons.



Talking of Purpose of travel, I also explained everything into details and also I have also provided my financial status by providing my statement of accounts from the two banks I save here in my country of residence and my bank in Kenya.



I don’t know why I have been refused again so please advise me where I can appeal to or what else I can do.










share|improve this question















closed as unclear what you're asking by blackbird, JoErNanO, CGCampbell, Karlson, Willeke Jul 27 '16 at 18:27


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • 3





    I'm not sure what your question is?

    – CMaster
    Jun 2 '16 at 10:57






  • 3





    @CMaster TL;DR Version - "Why has my visa application to Canada been denied, and what can I do about it?"

    – Peter M
    Jun 2 '16 at 11:24






  • 5





    Unfortunately, it's difficult to say exactly what has happened without deeply examining your actual application. How you present your information might matter (not just submit a bunch of documents, but paint a clear picture of why you won't overstay in Canada). If you can afford it, hire a good lawyer in Canada to prepare the application (budget about $3000), or possibly to appeal the existing decision (lawyer should decide whether it's best to appeal or submit new application, appeal may be expensive). Also, try and find someone in your circumstances who successfully got a visa, talk to them.

    – Eugene O
    Jun 2 '16 at 14:20











  • Is the whole family going to travel with you?

    – Karlson
    Jun 3 '16 at 15:07











  • Like everything else connected to Canadian immigration and border control, Canadian visa refusals are at best confusing and at worst impossible to understand. Seeking help from a Canadian immigration lawyer is probably the best thing to do.

    – Michael Hampton
    Jul 27 '16 at 2:43















3















My name is Dennis Whole Asante, I am a pastor and the General-Overseer of a church here in Nairobi, Kenya, I am also a Ghanaian and a residence of Kenya. I have all my documents as a legal residence here in Kenya. A friend of mine who is also like a brother, we have been friends for more than 15 years now, he is also a Ghanaian and we are still neighbors living at the same neighborhood in Ghana. He has invited me to visit him in Canada and provided all his documents including his statement of accounts, his residence permit, his tax clearance and every other necessary documents to prove his legality over there in Canada. I also applied for the Visa and also attached my statement of account even in Ghana and other documents needed that will enable me get the visa. As I submitted my application I was denied the visa by two reasons



  1. Purpose of Travel

  2. Family Ties in Canada and my home country

Those were the first reasons for my refusal, I then reapplied by providing an affidavit stating about my ties here because I also live here in Kenya with my wife and son, Provided a copy of the Tenancy agreement of my church rent which I pay 65,000 Kenyan Shillings which is about 650 US Dollars, Photos of my church, and other necessary documents to prove my ties here in my country of residence, I also provided my two bank statements of accounts from two banks here in Kenya and still added my Ghana stament of account which has more than 200,000 US dollars. I was also able to state my purpose of travel which I also added a letter from a church I will even be ministering as a guest speaker.



To my surprise my application have been refused again by giving me three different reasons from the first one and the reasons are:



  1. Travel History

  2. Purpose of Travel

  3. Personal assets and financial status

But when it comes to travel History, I attached even my already finished passport with Visas of South Africa, Zambia, Uganda, Malaysia, Nigeria, Rwanda which I travelled to all and returned to my home country and even in my new passport there are still other visas including an Israeli Visa which I travelled and returned few weeks ago. I only travel for only preaching appointments and I still return to my either home country or my country of residence so I don’t understand Travel History was marked as one of the reasons.



Talking of Purpose of travel, I also explained everything into details and also I have also provided my financial status by providing my statement of accounts from the two banks I save here in my country of residence and my bank in Kenya.



I don’t know why I have been refused again so please advise me where I can appeal to or what else I can do.










share|improve this question















closed as unclear what you're asking by blackbird, JoErNanO, CGCampbell, Karlson, Willeke Jul 27 '16 at 18:27


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • 3





    I'm not sure what your question is?

    – CMaster
    Jun 2 '16 at 10:57






  • 3





    @CMaster TL;DR Version - "Why has my visa application to Canada been denied, and what can I do about it?"

    – Peter M
    Jun 2 '16 at 11:24






  • 5





    Unfortunately, it's difficult to say exactly what has happened without deeply examining your actual application. How you present your information might matter (not just submit a bunch of documents, but paint a clear picture of why you won't overstay in Canada). If you can afford it, hire a good lawyer in Canada to prepare the application (budget about $3000), or possibly to appeal the existing decision (lawyer should decide whether it's best to appeal or submit new application, appeal may be expensive). Also, try and find someone in your circumstances who successfully got a visa, talk to them.

    – Eugene O
    Jun 2 '16 at 14:20











  • Is the whole family going to travel with you?

    – Karlson
    Jun 3 '16 at 15:07











  • Like everything else connected to Canadian immigration and border control, Canadian visa refusals are at best confusing and at worst impossible to understand. Seeking help from a Canadian immigration lawyer is probably the best thing to do.

    – Michael Hampton
    Jul 27 '16 at 2:43













3












3








3








My name is Dennis Whole Asante, I am a pastor and the General-Overseer of a church here in Nairobi, Kenya, I am also a Ghanaian and a residence of Kenya. I have all my documents as a legal residence here in Kenya. A friend of mine who is also like a brother, we have been friends for more than 15 years now, he is also a Ghanaian and we are still neighbors living at the same neighborhood in Ghana. He has invited me to visit him in Canada and provided all his documents including his statement of accounts, his residence permit, his tax clearance and every other necessary documents to prove his legality over there in Canada. I also applied for the Visa and also attached my statement of account even in Ghana and other documents needed that will enable me get the visa. As I submitted my application I was denied the visa by two reasons



  1. Purpose of Travel

  2. Family Ties in Canada and my home country

Those were the first reasons for my refusal, I then reapplied by providing an affidavit stating about my ties here because I also live here in Kenya with my wife and son, Provided a copy of the Tenancy agreement of my church rent which I pay 65,000 Kenyan Shillings which is about 650 US Dollars, Photos of my church, and other necessary documents to prove my ties here in my country of residence, I also provided my two bank statements of accounts from two banks here in Kenya and still added my Ghana stament of account which has more than 200,000 US dollars. I was also able to state my purpose of travel which I also added a letter from a church I will even be ministering as a guest speaker.



To my surprise my application have been refused again by giving me three different reasons from the first one and the reasons are:



  1. Travel History

  2. Purpose of Travel

  3. Personal assets and financial status

But when it comes to travel History, I attached even my already finished passport with Visas of South Africa, Zambia, Uganda, Malaysia, Nigeria, Rwanda which I travelled to all and returned to my home country and even in my new passport there are still other visas including an Israeli Visa which I travelled and returned few weeks ago. I only travel for only preaching appointments and I still return to my either home country or my country of residence so I don’t understand Travel History was marked as one of the reasons.



Talking of Purpose of travel, I also explained everything into details and also I have also provided my financial status by providing my statement of accounts from the two banks I save here in my country of residence and my bank in Kenya.



I don’t know why I have been refused again so please advise me where I can appeal to or what else I can do.










share|improve this question
















My name is Dennis Whole Asante, I am a pastor and the General-Overseer of a church here in Nairobi, Kenya, I am also a Ghanaian and a residence of Kenya. I have all my documents as a legal residence here in Kenya. A friend of mine who is also like a brother, we have been friends for more than 15 years now, he is also a Ghanaian and we are still neighbors living at the same neighborhood in Ghana. He has invited me to visit him in Canada and provided all his documents including his statement of accounts, his residence permit, his tax clearance and every other necessary documents to prove his legality over there in Canada. I also applied for the Visa and also attached my statement of account even in Ghana and other documents needed that will enable me get the visa. As I submitted my application I was denied the visa by two reasons



  1. Purpose of Travel

  2. Family Ties in Canada and my home country

Those were the first reasons for my refusal, I then reapplied by providing an affidavit stating about my ties here because I also live here in Kenya with my wife and son, Provided a copy of the Tenancy agreement of my church rent which I pay 65,000 Kenyan Shillings which is about 650 US Dollars, Photos of my church, and other necessary documents to prove my ties here in my country of residence, I also provided my two bank statements of accounts from two banks here in Kenya and still added my Ghana stament of account which has more than 200,000 US dollars. I was also able to state my purpose of travel which I also added a letter from a church I will even be ministering as a guest speaker.



To my surprise my application have been refused again by giving me three different reasons from the first one and the reasons are:



  1. Travel History

  2. Purpose of Travel

  3. Personal assets and financial status

But when it comes to travel History, I attached even my already finished passport with Visas of South Africa, Zambia, Uganda, Malaysia, Nigeria, Rwanda which I travelled to all and returned to my home country and even in my new passport there are still other visas including an Israeli Visa which I travelled and returned few weeks ago. I only travel for only preaching appointments and I still return to my either home country or my country of residence so I don’t understand Travel History was marked as one of the reasons.



Talking of Purpose of travel, I also explained everything into details and also I have also provided my financial status by providing my statement of accounts from the two banks I save here in my country of residence and my bank in Kenya.



I don’t know why I have been refused again so please advise me where I can appeal to or what else I can do.







visas canada visa-refusals ghanaian-citizens






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 27 '16 at 2:32









Gayot Fow

76k21199382




76k21199382










asked Jun 2 '16 at 10:50









Dennis WholeDennis Whole

22112




22112




closed as unclear what you're asking by blackbird, JoErNanO, CGCampbell, Karlson, Willeke Jul 27 '16 at 18:27


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









closed as unclear what you're asking by blackbird, JoErNanO, CGCampbell, Karlson, Willeke Jul 27 '16 at 18:27


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 3





    I'm not sure what your question is?

    – CMaster
    Jun 2 '16 at 10:57






  • 3





    @CMaster TL;DR Version - "Why has my visa application to Canada been denied, and what can I do about it?"

    – Peter M
    Jun 2 '16 at 11:24






  • 5





    Unfortunately, it's difficult to say exactly what has happened without deeply examining your actual application. How you present your information might matter (not just submit a bunch of documents, but paint a clear picture of why you won't overstay in Canada). If you can afford it, hire a good lawyer in Canada to prepare the application (budget about $3000), or possibly to appeal the existing decision (lawyer should decide whether it's best to appeal or submit new application, appeal may be expensive). Also, try and find someone in your circumstances who successfully got a visa, talk to them.

    – Eugene O
    Jun 2 '16 at 14:20











  • Is the whole family going to travel with you?

    – Karlson
    Jun 3 '16 at 15:07











  • Like everything else connected to Canadian immigration and border control, Canadian visa refusals are at best confusing and at worst impossible to understand. Seeking help from a Canadian immigration lawyer is probably the best thing to do.

    – Michael Hampton
    Jul 27 '16 at 2:43












  • 3





    I'm not sure what your question is?

    – CMaster
    Jun 2 '16 at 10:57






  • 3





    @CMaster TL;DR Version - "Why has my visa application to Canada been denied, and what can I do about it?"

    – Peter M
    Jun 2 '16 at 11:24






  • 5





    Unfortunately, it's difficult to say exactly what has happened without deeply examining your actual application. How you present your information might matter (not just submit a bunch of documents, but paint a clear picture of why you won't overstay in Canada). If you can afford it, hire a good lawyer in Canada to prepare the application (budget about $3000), or possibly to appeal the existing decision (lawyer should decide whether it's best to appeal or submit new application, appeal may be expensive). Also, try and find someone in your circumstances who successfully got a visa, talk to them.

    – Eugene O
    Jun 2 '16 at 14:20











  • Is the whole family going to travel with you?

    – Karlson
    Jun 3 '16 at 15:07











  • Like everything else connected to Canadian immigration and border control, Canadian visa refusals are at best confusing and at worst impossible to understand. Seeking help from a Canadian immigration lawyer is probably the best thing to do.

    – Michael Hampton
    Jul 27 '16 at 2:43







3




3





I'm not sure what your question is?

– CMaster
Jun 2 '16 at 10:57





I'm not sure what your question is?

– CMaster
Jun 2 '16 at 10:57




3




3





@CMaster TL;DR Version - "Why has my visa application to Canada been denied, and what can I do about it?"

– Peter M
Jun 2 '16 at 11:24





@CMaster TL;DR Version - "Why has my visa application to Canada been denied, and what can I do about it?"

– Peter M
Jun 2 '16 at 11:24




5




5





Unfortunately, it's difficult to say exactly what has happened without deeply examining your actual application. How you present your information might matter (not just submit a bunch of documents, but paint a clear picture of why you won't overstay in Canada). If you can afford it, hire a good lawyer in Canada to prepare the application (budget about $3000), or possibly to appeal the existing decision (lawyer should decide whether it's best to appeal or submit new application, appeal may be expensive). Also, try and find someone in your circumstances who successfully got a visa, talk to them.

– Eugene O
Jun 2 '16 at 14:20





Unfortunately, it's difficult to say exactly what has happened without deeply examining your actual application. How you present your information might matter (not just submit a bunch of documents, but paint a clear picture of why you won't overstay in Canada). If you can afford it, hire a good lawyer in Canada to prepare the application (budget about $3000), or possibly to appeal the existing decision (lawyer should decide whether it's best to appeal or submit new application, appeal may be expensive). Also, try and find someone in your circumstances who successfully got a visa, talk to them.

– Eugene O
Jun 2 '16 at 14:20













Is the whole family going to travel with you?

– Karlson
Jun 3 '16 at 15:07





Is the whole family going to travel with you?

– Karlson
Jun 3 '16 at 15:07













Like everything else connected to Canadian immigration and border control, Canadian visa refusals are at best confusing and at worst impossible to understand. Seeking help from a Canadian immigration lawyer is probably the best thing to do.

– Michael Hampton
Jul 27 '16 at 2:43





Like everything else connected to Canadian immigration and border control, Canadian visa refusals are at best confusing and at worst impossible to understand. Seeking help from a Canadian immigration lawyer is probably the best thing to do.

– Michael Hampton
Jul 27 '16 at 2:43










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















5














It is best to contact a lawyer, but I will offer some suggestions based on my experience of having to apply for multiple visas:




  1. Purpose of Travel



    If you are rejected for this reason, it means you did not make clear [a] why you are visiting [b] provide proof that supported your reason for travel. If you wanted to come for a short visit (temporary stay), you should have provided proof of this in the form of [a] a return ticket [b] hotel reservation. If your friend was having you stay with him, he should provide an affidavit of support specifically stating that he is willing to cover your expenses and that you will be staying with him at his residence.




  2. Family Ties in Canada and my home country



    As you are a foreign resident in Kenya, and your permanent residency is in Ghana, you have to prove to the immigration authority's satisfaction that you intend to come back. Now, if you have strong family ties in Canada (such as a lifelong friend) this makes your application that much more suspicious as it is easy for you to go on a short visit, and end up staying with your friend indefinitely - in other words, you would be a defacto immigrant. Evidence of strong ties include a steady job, evidence of obligations (for example, a bank account that shows you are paying rent), your family is with you (for example, you have kids in school) etc.



Each time you apply, your application is judged independently of the previous application - as circumstances may have changed in your favor. Therefore, the second time you applied you got different reasons for rejection.




  1. Travel History



    This simply means that you do not have sufficient proof of travel to other countries. They usually mean other European countries, in other words, countries that are a target of large influx of migrations. You stated that you only traveled for speaking arrangements, but here you are traveling for tourism.




  2. Purpose of Travel



    This one was easy to figure out, since you stated:




    I was also able to state my purpose of travel which I also added a
    letter from a church I will even be ministering as a guest speaker.




    The immigration authorities may consider this work (even if it is unpaid), and you may have required a different visa type.



    You cannot state that you are going there to visit your friend, and yet you will be going there as a guest speaker at a church. They each require different documents.




  3. Personal assets and financial status



    This simply means your financial income is not sufficient for the length and purpose of your trip; and you may be a burden on state assistance. If you show large balances with no justification, you may be suspected of funds parking - that is, borrowing or "parking" money just to show a healthy balance, when in fact you do not have access to these funds, or the source of these funds cannot be determined.



Finally, unless you are applying for a marriage/spouse visa, I have never seen pictures being used to establish family ties. It doesn't prove anything as anyone can take a picture with a bunch of people and claim family ties.






share|improve this answer





























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    5














    It is best to contact a lawyer, but I will offer some suggestions based on my experience of having to apply for multiple visas:




    1. Purpose of Travel



      If you are rejected for this reason, it means you did not make clear [a] why you are visiting [b] provide proof that supported your reason for travel. If you wanted to come for a short visit (temporary stay), you should have provided proof of this in the form of [a] a return ticket [b] hotel reservation. If your friend was having you stay with him, he should provide an affidavit of support specifically stating that he is willing to cover your expenses and that you will be staying with him at his residence.




    2. Family Ties in Canada and my home country



      As you are a foreign resident in Kenya, and your permanent residency is in Ghana, you have to prove to the immigration authority's satisfaction that you intend to come back. Now, if you have strong family ties in Canada (such as a lifelong friend) this makes your application that much more suspicious as it is easy for you to go on a short visit, and end up staying with your friend indefinitely - in other words, you would be a defacto immigrant. Evidence of strong ties include a steady job, evidence of obligations (for example, a bank account that shows you are paying rent), your family is with you (for example, you have kids in school) etc.



    Each time you apply, your application is judged independently of the previous application - as circumstances may have changed in your favor. Therefore, the second time you applied you got different reasons for rejection.




    1. Travel History



      This simply means that you do not have sufficient proof of travel to other countries. They usually mean other European countries, in other words, countries that are a target of large influx of migrations. You stated that you only traveled for speaking arrangements, but here you are traveling for tourism.




    2. Purpose of Travel



      This one was easy to figure out, since you stated:




      I was also able to state my purpose of travel which I also added a
      letter from a church I will even be ministering as a guest speaker.




      The immigration authorities may consider this work (even if it is unpaid), and you may have required a different visa type.



      You cannot state that you are going there to visit your friend, and yet you will be going there as a guest speaker at a church. They each require different documents.




    3. Personal assets and financial status



      This simply means your financial income is not sufficient for the length and purpose of your trip; and you may be a burden on state assistance. If you show large balances with no justification, you may be suspected of funds parking - that is, borrowing or "parking" money just to show a healthy balance, when in fact you do not have access to these funds, or the source of these funds cannot be determined.



    Finally, unless you are applying for a marriage/spouse visa, I have never seen pictures being used to establish family ties. It doesn't prove anything as anyone can take a picture with a bunch of people and claim family ties.






    share|improve this answer



























      5














      It is best to contact a lawyer, but I will offer some suggestions based on my experience of having to apply for multiple visas:




      1. Purpose of Travel



        If you are rejected for this reason, it means you did not make clear [a] why you are visiting [b] provide proof that supported your reason for travel. If you wanted to come for a short visit (temporary stay), you should have provided proof of this in the form of [a] a return ticket [b] hotel reservation. If your friend was having you stay with him, he should provide an affidavit of support specifically stating that he is willing to cover your expenses and that you will be staying with him at his residence.




      2. Family Ties in Canada and my home country



        As you are a foreign resident in Kenya, and your permanent residency is in Ghana, you have to prove to the immigration authority's satisfaction that you intend to come back. Now, if you have strong family ties in Canada (such as a lifelong friend) this makes your application that much more suspicious as it is easy for you to go on a short visit, and end up staying with your friend indefinitely - in other words, you would be a defacto immigrant. Evidence of strong ties include a steady job, evidence of obligations (for example, a bank account that shows you are paying rent), your family is with you (for example, you have kids in school) etc.



      Each time you apply, your application is judged independently of the previous application - as circumstances may have changed in your favor. Therefore, the second time you applied you got different reasons for rejection.




      1. Travel History



        This simply means that you do not have sufficient proof of travel to other countries. They usually mean other European countries, in other words, countries that are a target of large influx of migrations. You stated that you only traveled for speaking arrangements, but here you are traveling for tourism.




      2. Purpose of Travel



        This one was easy to figure out, since you stated:




        I was also able to state my purpose of travel which I also added a
        letter from a church I will even be ministering as a guest speaker.




        The immigration authorities may consider this work (even if it is unpaid), and you may have required a different visa type.



        You cannot state that you are going there to visit your friend, and yet you will be going there as a guest speaker at a church. They each require different documents.




      3. Personal assets and financial status



        This simply means your financial income is not sufficient for the length and purpose of your trip; and you may be a burden on state assistance. If you show large balances with no justification, you may be suspected of funds parking - that is, borrowing or "parking" money just to show a healthy balance, when in fact you do not have access to these funds, or the source of these funds cannot be determined.



      Finally, unless you are applying for a marriage/spouse visa, I have never seen pictures being used to establish family ties. It doesn't prove anything as anyone can take a picture with a bunch of people and claim family ties.






      share|improve this answer

























        5












        5








        5







        It is best to contact a lawyer, but I will offer some suggestions based on my experience of having to apply for multiple visas:




        1. Purpose of Travel



          If you are rejected for this reason, it means you did not make clear [a] why you are visiting [b] provide proof that supported your reason for travel. If you wanted to come for a short visit (temporary stay), you should have provided proof of this in the form of [a] a return ticket [b] hotel reservation. If your friend was having you stay with him, he should provide an affidavit of support specifically stating that he is willing to cover your expenses and that you will be staying with him at his residence.




        2. Family Ties in Canada and my home country



          As you are a foreign resident in Kenya, and your permanent residency is in Ghana, you have to prove to the immigration authority's satisfaction that you intend to come back. Now, if you have strong family ties in Canada (such as a lifelong friend) this makes your application that much more suspicious as it is easy for you to go on a short visit, and end up staying with your friend indefinitely - in other words, you would be a defacto immigrant. Evidence of strong ties include a steady job, evidence of obligations (for example, a bank account that shows you are paying rent), your family is with you (for example, you have kids in school) etc.



        Each time you apply, your application is judged independently of the previous application - as circumstances may have changed in your favor. Therefore, the second time you applied you got different reasons for rejection.




        1. Travel History



          This simply means that you do not have sufficient proof of travel to other countries. They usually mean other European countries, in other words, countries that are a target of large influx of migrations. You stated that you only traveled for speaking arrangements, but here you are traveling for tourism.




        2. Purpose of Travel



          This one was easy to figure out, since you stated:




          I was also able to state my purpose of travel which I also added a
          letter from a church I will even be ministering as a guest speaker.




          The immigration authorities may consider this work (even if it is unpaid), and you may have required a different visa type.



          You cannot state that you are going there to visit your friend, and yet you will be going there as a guest speaker at a church. They each require different documents.




        3. Personal assets and financial status



          This simply means your financial income is not sufficient for the length and purpose of your trip; and you may be a burden on state assistance. If you show large balances with no justification, you may be suspected of funds parking - that is, borrowing or "parking" money just to show a healthy balance, when in fact you do not have access to these funds, or the source of these funds cannot be determined.



        Finally, unless you are applying for a marriage/spouse visa, I have never seen pictures being used to establish family ties. It doesn't prove anything as anyone can take a picture with a bunch of people and claim family ties.






        share|improve this answer













        It is best to contact a lawyer, but I will offer some suggestions based on my experience of having to apply for multiple visas:




        1. Purpose of Travel



          If you are rejected for this reason, it means you did not make clear [a] why you are visiting [b] provide proof that supported your reason for travel. If you wanted to come for a short visit (temporary stay), you should have provided proof of this in the form of [a] a return ticket [b] hotel reservation. If your friend was having you stay with him, he should provide an affidavit of support specifically stating that he is willing to cover your expenses and that you will be staying with him at his residence.




        2. Family Ties in Canada and my home country



          As you are a foreign resident in Kenya, and your permanent residency is in Ghana, you have to prove to the immigration authority's satisfaction that you intend to come back. Now, if you have strong family ties in Canada (such as a lifelong friend) this makes your application that much more suspicious as it is easy for you to go on a short visit, and end up staying with your friend indefinitely - in other words, you would be a defacto immigrant. Evidence of strong ties include a steady job, evidence of obligations (for example, a bank account that shows you are paying rent), your family is with you (for example, you have kids in school) etc.



        Each time you apply, your application is judged independently of the previous application - as circumstances may have changed in your favor. Therefore, the second time you applied you got different reasons for rejection.




        1. Travel History



          This simply means that you do not have sufficient proof of travel to other countries. They usually mean other European countries, in other words, countries that are a target of large influx of migrations. You stated that you only traveled for speaking arrangements, but here you are traveling for tourism.




        2. Purpose of Travel



          This one was easy to figure out, since you stated:




          I was also able to state my purpose of travel which I also added a
          letter from a church I will even be ministering as a guest speaker.




          The immigration authorities may consider this work (even if it is unpaid), and you may have required a different visa type.



          You cannot state that you are going there to visit your friend, and yet you will be going there as a guest speaker at a church. They each require different documents.




        3. Personal assets and financial status



          This simply means your financial income is not sufficient for the length and purpose of your trip; and you may be a burden on state assistance. If you show large balances with no justification, you may be suspected of funds parking - that is, borrowing or "parking" money just to show a healthy balance, when in fact you do not have access to these funds, or the source of these funds cannot be determined.



        Finally, unless you are applying for a marriage/spouse visa, I have never seen pictures being used to establish family ties. It doesn't prove anything as anyone can take a picture with a bunch of people and claim family ties.







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        answered Jul 27 '16 at 5:42









        Burhan KhalidBurhan Khalid

        36.6k372147




        36.6k372147













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