Vancouver Island mother appeals for son's sponsorship
Domingo says her greatest fear is that her son, John, will grow up without a mother
CBC News
Posted: Mar 7, 2013 6:33 AM PT
Last Updated: Mar 7, 2013 6:38 PM PT
Related
Related Stories
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
A Vancouver Island mother says immigration officials — and an honest mistake — are keeping her separated from her son in the Philippines.
Divina Domingo, 31, is a landed immigrant who has been trying to sponsor her seven-year-old son to come to Canada for the last three years.
But her application has been denied and appeals to Immigration Canada have been rejected because of a regulation that states any family member not declared when you become a landed immigrant will not be able to be sponsored in the future.
Regulation 117(9)(d) was implemented in 2002 and was designed to deter those who want to deliberately mislead immigration. Between January and September of 2012, at least 307 family sponsorships were denied because of this regulation.
Domingo says she was not aware of the strict regulation and therefore the family failed to declare her son twice: first, when her own mother originally filed an application to sponsor her to come to Canada, and later when she arrived in Canada in 2009.
'I didn't know'
Domingo herself was just two years old when her mother left the Philippines in the 1980s and came to Canada under the live-in caregiver program. She cared for Canadian children and eventually saved enough money to sponsor her own grown children.
When her mother submitted the application for sponsorship in 2005, she says she was not aware she was about to become a grandmother.
“My mom sponsored us, my brother and my sister and then … when our papers are processing I got pregnant,” Domingo told CBC News. “I got pregnant and I didn’t know I can declare my son. I didn’t know.”
Domingo's son, John, cries as he speaks to his mother via webcam. (CBC)By the time Domingo finally arrived in Canada, her son was already three years old. But again, Domingo failed to declare him as a dependent child.
“They’re thinking that I lied and that it’s intentional — that I didn’t declare my son — but it wasn’t,” she said.
Domingo works as a factory worker and a house cleaner in Saanichton and regularly sends money to her son, who lives with relatives in a one-room house in the Philippines.
Appeals denied
Vancouver immigration lawyer Catherine Sas says regulation 117(9)(d) is a punitive and harsh law that keeps families separated for life.
“I think this is an extremely heartless provision,” she told CBC News.
“There are other ways to deal with people who are misrepresented. If somebody has not been truthful, their application can be denied, they can be stripped of their permanent resident status.”
Immigration Canada can make exceptions to any regulation on compassionate and humanitarian grounds, but Domingo’s appeals have been denied. Immigration Minister Jason Kenney was unavailable for an interview because of a surprise visit to Iraq.
His department sent a statement saying their records show Domingo’s mother applied to sponsor her daughter five months after her grandson was born, and that the family provided false information.
Domingo says that is not correct, and that the discrepancy is likely because it took years for their papers to be processed.
Immigration officials have also said that “a highly-trained officer has determined that the best interests of the child are being satisfactorily met under the current circumstances.”
Elizabeth May, Green Party Leader and MP for Saanich-Gulf Islands, has asked Kenney to reconsider Domingo’s case. She said that family reunification should be a priority for Immigration Canada.
Divina Domingo is a landed immigrant who has, for the last three years, been trying to sponsor her seven-year-old son to come to Canada. (CBC)“I'm still hoping and begging on a regular basis that they will extend compassionate and humanitarian grounds to allow a small child to rejoin his mother,” May said.
“Miscommunication and early mistakes in the documentation are keeping this little boy outside of Canada.”
Domingo says her greatest fear is that her son, John, will grow up without a mother.
“My son needs his mother because me, myself, I grew up without a mother,” she said.
“I know how hard it is to grow up without a mother. That's why I’m doing my best to be with my son. I want him here.”
With files from the CBC's Natalie ClancyShare Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- Teen's death sparks call for social services information
- The Alberta government wants to see changes on how provinces share information about children under the protection of social services. more »
- Christy Clark thanks Liberal MLAs in Vancouver
- B.C. Premier Christy Clark thanked her newly elected and re-elected MLAs in Vancouver on Thursday, who gathered for the first time following the Liberals' surprise victory in last week's provincial election. more »
- Pickup truck backs up over mother, 2 children in tent
- A 20-year-old woman has been arrested for allegedly backing her pickup truck over a mother and two children who were sleeping in a tent at a campsite in northeastern B.C. more »
- Fever medicine for infants, children under recall
- Quality concerns with a Chinese producer of acetaminophen have prompted a recall of four fever medications meant for infants and children. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Federal Court won't remove MPs over robocall allegations
- The Federal Court says it won't throw six MPs out of their seats over allegations of widespread vote suppression through automated robocalls in the 2011 federal election. But Judge Richard Mosley did find that fraud occurred in the election. more »
- Duffy says he wants to give Canadians 'the whole story'
- Senator Mike Duffy says he wants a "full and open" inquiry so Canadians can get all the facts about the scandal that has rocked the Senate and the Prime Minister's Office and that he has no plans to resign. more »
- Alleged Ford crack video seller not responding to calls
- The journalist who broke the story alleging Toronto Mayor Rob Ford was recorded on video smoking crack cocaine says he may never be able to get his hands on the evidence. more »
- 3 injured in Washington state bridge collapse
- A Washington state bridge over a river collapsed Thursday evening, dumping two vehicles into the water and sparking a rescue effort by boats and divers who searched the chilly waterway north of Seattle. more »
- Bridge collapse on Washington interstate drops cars into water
- Pickup truck backs up over mother, 2 children in tent
- Vancouver man abandons Porsche on B.C. ferry
- Teen's death sparks call for social services information
- B.C. teen saves pet dog in 'terrifying' cougar attack
- Men found dead in B.C. lake wore oversized life-jackets
- Christy Clark thanks Liberal MLAs in Vancouver
- 750 homes sliding away in Quesnel, B.C.
- Johnsons Landing homes must be abandoned, says report

