What is Canada Bill C-3? How will it help Indian-origin residents, ‘lost Canadian’?

Canada has amended its Citizenship Act to make it easy to obtain Canadian citizenship.

Canada decided to amend its Citizenship Act, which widen the scope of the time, which can become a Canadian citizen at a time when Indian Donald Trump is facing difficult times in the US due to the cracks of Donald Trump administration. Bill C -3 would allow a Canadian parent that was not born in Canada, which was not to pass the citizenship of children born abroad beyond the first generation. This will apply to the child abroad and beyond the first generation. But parents should have enough connection with Canada, which means that she must have stayed in Canada for 1095 days before birth or before adopting a child. The bill will also benefit ‘Lost Canadian’, a word that refers to those who lose Canadian citizenship or were first denied a Canadian citizenship due to some provisions of pre -citizenship law. “Most cases were overcome by changes in law in 2009 and 2015. These changes allowed people to gain canadian citizenship or to regain the citizenship lost by them. Despite this,” lost Canadian “and other categories of descendants require additional amendments to include other categories of descendants, which did not benefit from the changes of 2009 and 2015,” the government said. “Bill C-3” will restore citizenship for lost Canadian people, their descendants and anyone who was born abroad for a Canadian parents abroad, was born to a Canadian parents in second or later generations before the law came into force. It includes people who lost their citizenship as a result of the needs of the Citizenship Act. The current citizenship is the first generation limit of the law, which means that a Canadian parents can only pass Canadian citizenship for a child born outside Canada, if either Born or naturally born in Canada in Canada before the child’s birth. Due to this limit, Canadian citizens who were born outside Canada and gained their citizenship through descendants cannot give citizenship for their child born outside Canada, and cannot apply for a direct grant of citizenship for a child adopted outside Canada.

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