Last Updated: Friday, 01 November 2019, 13:47 GMT

Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada

The Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) is Canada's largest independent administrative tribunal, responsible for making well-reasoned decisions on immigration and refugee matters efficiently, fairly and in accordance with the law. It consists of three divisions: the Refugee Protection Division; the Immigration Division; and the Immigration Appeal Division. The Refugee Protection Division decides claims for refugee protection made by people already in Canada. Website: www.irb-cisr.gc.ca/
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Indonesia: Information on the "Free East Timor" underground movement

1 February 1995 | Publisher: Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | Document type: Query Responses

Indonesia: Information on the Maubere Council of National Resistance

1 February 1995 | Publisher: Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | Document type: Query Responses

Information sur les activités et l'organisation du groupe (ou secte) religieux Enfants de Dieu (Children of God) ainsi que sur le contrôle qu'il exercerait sur ses membres, particulièrement en ce qui a trait à ses activités en Asie dont en Indonésie

1 April 1994 | Publisher: Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | Document type: Query Responses

Indonesia: "Mystery Shooters" of Soharto government

1 May 1990 | Publisher: Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | Document type: Query Responses

Indonesia: 1) Are persons born in Indonesia entitled to citizenship and what conditions apply? 2) Under what conditions may a person lose their Indonesian citizenship? 3) Are any registration or reporting duties required of citizens who reside outside of Indonesia?

1 May 1990 | Publisher: Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | Document type: Query Responses

Indonesia: The status of the Aceh Merdeka group

1 May 1990 | Publisher: Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | Document type: Query Responses

Indonesia: Would an ethnic Chinese born in Indonesia in 1934 be an Indonesian citizen at birth? If not, would their parents or they have to "activate" citizenship there? If they had become an Indonesian citizen would they be likely to have lost it by moving to the PRC in 1968 and remaining there until 1989?

1 May 1990 | Publisher: Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | Document type: Query Responses

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