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This is an archive article published on July 25, 2007

Moving to Canada? Kaurs, Singhs find lots in a name

Kaurs and Singhs planning to emigrate to Canada — please excuse.

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Kaurs and Singhs planning to emigrate to Canada — please excuse.

The Canadian Government’s long-standing immigration policy that forces people with the two surnames to change them has delayed many people’s arrival in the country, the latest being that of a Punjabi man wanting to join his wife in Alberta province.

Tarvinder Kaur, who is pregnant, said her husband Jaspal Singh’s application to become a permanent resident has been delayed for well over a month because of his last name. He has no choice but to legally change his name in India so he can get to Calgary before she gives birth next month, she said.

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Karen Shadd-Evelyn, a spokeswoman with Citizenship and Immigration Canada, said the policy preventing people from immigrating to Canada with those last names has been in place for the last 10 years. “I believe the thinking behind it in this case is because it is so common. (With) the sheer number of applicants that have those as their surnames, it’s just a matter for numbers and for processing in that visa office,” the spokeswoman said.

Citizenship and Immigration Canada says there is no such policy against other common last names.

Canadian Broadcasting Corporation has obtained a copy of a letter sent from the Canadian High Commission in New Delhi to Singh’s family stating that “the names Kaur and Singh do not qualify for the purpose of immigration to Canada.”

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