Both my son and hubby are SC now, will that help?komatineni wrote:Assuming all other aspects are in line with ICA preferred list, the practice seems 1 year REP. After 1 year the REP will be given at normal duration (or 2 years).
There is pretty high chance to get it denied if the person stayed out of SG for most of the time (not work related)
hope even I get denied, I can still get ltvp with the sponsor of my hubby.komatineni wrote:Guess that should but there are plenty of cases (or rather abuse) where ICA denied the renewal. Similar profile, high income, growth potential but declined the renewal. So my guess as as best as the examples shared here in the forum or info we hear. Could be totally wrong but i dont think anyone need to worry when they are not going to be in SG any time soon.
follow your logic, we should deprive the citizenship of those SCs that residing overseas over years since they are not residents either.sundaymorningstaple wrote:Frankly, if you have been out of the country for a couple of years and are planning on being there for several more, then your REP wont get renewed at all. And, if you are still out of the country, it's doubtful you will get an LTVP either. Why should they? PR? you are not a resident nor have you been for a number of years and are still out of the country, therefore you are NOT a resident, (denied). LTVP? Long Term Visit Pass? you are not visiting - either long or short time), you are resident outside of the country. Probably, no as well until you move back to Singapore full time. Then maybe. But I really don't see it happening.
so let's say lah, if LTVP or PR is out of question, ever been a PR pose a red flag when getting just a short term visit pass?sundaymorningstaple wrote:Why is that? Citizenship confers it's own set of privileges does it not? Citizenship is not gained by residency but normally by being born in the country (Jus soli - only around 30 countries practice this - US being one of them - Singapore is not) or by descent (jus sanguinis - normally at least one of the parents is a citizen of that country - this is how dual citizenship usually comes about). Your logic is the one that appears faulty (trying to compare apples with oranges).
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