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Thursday, January 27th, 2005
I received this email from Marvin Brown. I also found it very hard to believe
but I did find the original story on the Toronto Sun webpage.
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/Columnists/Toronto/Peter_Worthington/2005/01/23/907704.html
I have also added a new forum to allow comments on this story.
Click here.
Larry
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| Marvin Brown <marv.joan@xcountry.tv> |
| Reply-To : |
"Marvin Brown" <marv.joan@xcountry.tv> |
| Sent : |
January 27, 2005 12:10:28 AM |
| To : |
"Larry Aubry" <laubry@hotmail.com> |
| Subject : |
Fw: MILITARY KIDS |
|
Larry for your info, should this be passed on??
----- Original Message -----
From: James E Steed
To: Undisclosed-Recipient:;
Sent: Monday, January 24, 2005 12:28 PM
Subject: MILITARY KIDS
Sun, January 23, 2005
Forces' babies deprived
By Peter Worthington -- For the Toronto Sun
You are not going to believe this.
At first I didn't, but I do now: Are you aware that someone born in a
hospital on a Canadian military base overseas to Canadian parents in the
Armed Forces is not automatically a Canadian citizen?
This, despite having a Canadian birth certificate and social insurance
number (SIN)?
Krista Bruton-Anderson is such a case.
She was born in the military hospital on the Canadian base at Lahr,
Germany,
where her father was a soldier (Intelligence Corps). A birth certificate
was
issued.
When her parents returned to Canada, so did Krista, where she has lived
ever
since.
Life was normal until she grew up, got married -- then tried to get her
SIN
changed to her married name.
The ministry of human resources rejected her birth certificate and said
no,
she wasn't a Canadian citizen, and destroyed her social insurance card.
When contacted, DND public affairs at first insisted there must be a
mistake -- children born overseas to service personnel, especially on a
Canadian base, were automatically citizens.
Citizenship and immigration in Ottawa also believed being born on a
Canadian
military base to Canadian military parents and possessing a Canadian
birth
certificate was proof of citizenship.
Krista knows otherwise.
It seems Human Resources Canada has changed the rules since 9/11,
without
the apparent knowledge of DND and immigration.
In 2003, the Oakville office of Human Resources Canada sent Krista's
birth
certificate and SIN card to Ottawa with the application for a new card
in
her married name, Anderson.
"A few weeks later I was contacted and told my application had been
returned
as I didn't have proper proof of Canadian citizenship, and that my SIN
card
had been destroyed," Anderson says. "I have been without a SIN card ever
since."
At first she thought it was a bureaucratic mix-up.
No, she was told, it was new security legislation after 9/11, and that
she'd
have to obtain "proper proof" of citizenship, pay a $75 application fee,
get
passport photos, have her identity certified by a notary public and then
be
prepared to wait eight months while the backlog of citizenship
applications
was processed.
"Needless to say I was astounded," Krista says. "I've lived in Canada
constantly since my parents came home when I was around 1 year old.
Today I
am a Canadian but not a Canadian -- no identity, no SIN. Why should I
have
to pay to get citizenship when I've never been anything but a Canadian
citizen?"
Why indeed? Her father, Dave Bruton, who retired from the military after
37
years, is equally upset. "This should concern every service family
abroad. A
child born on a Canadian Forces base, in a Forces hospital, under the
Canadian flag, to Canadian citizens, should have all the rights of
citizenship as if they were born anywhere in Canada."
That was exactly the view of DND when I called them. It was also the
view of
Immigration Canada, when I called. That said, it seems Human Resources
Canada is the final authority.
Krista has contacted her MP's constituency office, where she was treated
sympathetically, but without results.
I phoned the human resources and was told that since 9/11 a birth
certificate of someone born outside Canada is no longer acceptable as
proof
of citizenship. A Canadian citizenship card is necessary for a SIN card
-
and that has to be applied for, at a $75 fee. Tough luck, Krista.
The constituency office of her MP (Liberal Gary Carr) wants to help, but
it's helpless when confronted by a bureaucracy whose departments can't
agree. Without a social insurance number, Krista is virtually stateless,
and
she is filing a formal complaint.
I wonder how many of our married Armed Forces personnel overseas realize
their second-class status? It's a slap in the face of our military. How
dare
an agency of government reduce the families of Armed Forces personnel to
supplicants and charge them money to prove their citizenship? What kind
of
security is that anyway?
What kind of prime minister is Paul Martin that he allows such an
indignity
imposed on those who serve the country overseas?
Canadian Airborne Brotherhood
James E Steed CD*
RR1 5086 Hwy 38
Harrowsmith, ON
K0H 1V0
613-372-2294
www.cdnabbrotherhood.ca
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