If I am removed from a country, do I have a choice of what country I am sent to? [closed]



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I overstayed here in Taiwan because of an accident: my apartment was burned so the owner of the apartment filed a civil case for me. The court said I can't exit the country and I can't renew my visa because of that. If I am deported, will it be to my country or origin or would I be allowed to go another country?







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closed as unclear what you're asking by choster, Jim MacKenzie, Ali Awan, jwenting, Thorsten S. Jul 18 at 14:27


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 10




    The court said you can't leave the country but they are going to deport you?
    – DJClayworth
    Jul 17 at 14:08






  • 7




    Do you have legal representation? What have they advised you?
    – Traveller
    Jul 17 at 14:24






  • 6




    @DJClayworth In some countries, if one is forbidden to leave the country because of a court case, one is forced to violate immigration law. After the case is over, deportation could follow, although some form of voluntary departure might be offered instead. Richard Torres: In some countries you can make an application to extend your stay without leaving the country. Have you investigated whether that is possible in Taiwan?
    – phoog
    Jul 17 at 15:09











  • I'm guessing the apartment owner filed a civil case against you, blaming you for the damage. I'm more surprised that you would be told to stay if you were the plaintiff.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    Jul 17 at 18:09










  • @AndrewLazarus That can happen, perhaps to deter frivolous law suits by foreigners.
    – xuq01
    Jul 18 at 6:44
















up vote
6
down vote

favorite












I overstayed here in Taiwan because of an accident: my apartment was burned so the owner of the apartment filed a civil case for me. The court said I can't exit the country and I can't renew my visa because of that. If I am deported, will it be to my country or origin or would I be allowed to go another country?







share|improve this question














closed as unclear what you're asking by choster, Jim MacKenzie, Ali Awan, jwenting, Thorsten S. Jul 18 at 14:27


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 10




    The court said you can't leave the country but they are going to deport you?
    – DJClayworth
    Jul 17 at 14:08






  • 7




    Do you have legal representation? What have they advised you?
    – Traveller
    Jul 17 at 14:24






  • 6




    @DJClayworth In some countries, if one is forbidden to leave the country because of a court case, one is forced to violate immigration law. After the case is over, deportation could follow, although some form of voluntary departure might be offered instead. Richard Torres: In some countries you can make an application to extend your stay without leaving the country. Have you investigated whether that is possible in Taiwan?
    – phoog
    Jul 17 at 15:09











  • I'm guessing the apartment owner filed a civil case against you, blaming you for the damage. I'm more surprised that you would be told to stay if you were the plaintiff.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    Jul 17 at 18:09










  • @AndrewLazarus That can happen, perhaps to deter frivolous law suits by foreigners.
    – xuq01
    Jul 18 at 6:44












up vote
6
down vote

favorite









up vote
6
down vote

favorite











I overstayed here in Taiwan because of an accident: my apartment was burned so the owner of the apartment filed a civil case for me. The court said I can't exit the country and I can't renew my visa because of that. If I am deported, will it be to my country or origin or would I be allowed to go another country?







share|improve this question














I overstayed here in Taiwan because of an accident: my apartment was burned so the owner of the apartment filed a civil case for me. The court said I can't exit the country and I can't renew my visa because of that. If I am deported, will it be to my country or origin or would I be allowed to go another country?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 17 at 17:55









Traveller

4,0041923




4,0041923










asked Jul 17 at 13:32









Richard Torres

311




311




closed as unclear what you're asking by choster, Jim MacKenzie, Ali Awan, jwenting, Thorsten S. Jul 18 at 14:27


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as unclear what you're asking by choster, Jim MacKenzie, Ali Awan, jwenting, Thorsten S. Jul 18 at 14:27


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 10




    The court said you can't leave the country but they are going to deport you?
    – DJClayworth
    Jul 17 at 14:08






  • 7




    Do you have legal representation? What have they advised you?
    – Traveller
    Jul 17 at 14:24






  • 6




    @DJClayworth In some countries, if one is forbidden to leave the country because of a court case, one is forced to violate immigration law. After the case is over, deportation could follow, although some form of voluntary departure might be offered instead. Richard Torres: In some countries you can make an application to extend your stay without leaving the country. Have you investigated whether that is possible in Taiwan?
    – phoog
    Jul 17 at 15:09











  • I'm guessing the apartment owner filed a civil case against you, blaming you for the damage. I'm more surprised that you would be told to stay if you were the plaintiff.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    Jul 17 at 18:09










  • @AndrewLazarus That can happen, perhaps to deter frivolous law suits by foreigners.
    – xuq01
    Jul 18 at 6:44












  • 10




    The court said you can't leave the country but they are going to deport you?
    – DJClayworth
    Jul 17 at 14:08






  • 7




    Do you have legal representation? What have they advised you?
    – Traveller
    Jul 17 at 14:24






  • 6




    @DJClayworth In some countries, if one is forbidden to leave the country because of a court case, one is forced to violate immigration law. After the case is over, deportation could follow, although some form of voluntary departure might be offered instead. Richard Torres: In some countries you can make an application to extend your stay without leaving the country. Have you investigated whether that is possible in Taiwan?
    – phoog
    Jul 17 at 15:09











  • I'm guessing the apartment owner filed a civil case against you, blaming you for the damage. I'm more surprised that you would be told to stay if you were the plaintiff.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    Jul 17 at 18:09










  • @AndrewLazarus That can happen, perhaps to deter frivolous law suits by foreigners.
    – xuq01
    Jul 18 at 6:44







10




10




The court said you can't leave the country but they are going to deport you?
– DJClayworth
Jul 17 at 14:08




The court said you can't leave the country but they are going to deport you?
– DJClayworth
Jul 17 at 14:08




7




7




Do you have legal representation? What have they advised you?
– Traveller
Jul 17 at 14:24




Do you have legal representation? What have they advised you?
– Traveller
Jul 17 at 14:24




6




6




@DJClayworth In some countries, if one is forbidden to leave the country because of a court case, one is forced to violate immigration law. After the case is over, deportation could follow, although some form of voluntary departure might be offered instead. Richard Torres: In some countries you can make an application to extend your stay without leaving the country. Have you investigated whether that is possible in Taiwan?
– phoog
Jul 17 at 15:09





@DJClayworth In some countries, if one is forbidden to leave the country because of a court case, one is forced to violate immigration law. After the case is over, deportation could follow, although some form of voluntary departure might be offered instead. Richard Torres: In some countries you can make an application to extend your stay without leaving the country. Have you investigated whether that is possible in Taiwan?
– phoog
Jul 17 at 15:09













I'm guessing the apartment owner filed a civil case against you, blaming you for the damage. I'm more surprised that you would be told to stay if you were the plaintiff.
– Andrew Lazarus
Jul 17 at 18:09




I'm guessing the apartment owner filed a civil case against you, blaming you for the damage. I'm more surprised that you would be told to stay if you were the plaintiff.
– Andrew Lazarus
Jul 17 at 18:09












@AndrewLazarus That can happen, perhaps to deter frivolous law suits by foreigners.
– xuq01
Jul 18 at 6:44




@AndrewLazarus That can happen, perhaps to deter frivolous law suits by foreigners.
– xuq01
Jul 18 at 6:44










1 Answer
1






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up vote
7
down vote













To start by answering the question you asked, most countries that deport you will do it to a country of their choice. You may ask to be sent to somewhere specific, but they may or may not do that.



But to answer some questions you didn't ask, you should be actively engaging with immigration to sort this out. You should also get yourself a lawyer who can advise you. That may seem expensive but having a deportation on your record is going to seriously restrict your travel and employment in the future. You are going to need one to fight your civil case anyway. You really want to sort this out without being forced to leave, or having an overstay on your record.



Options you should be looking at include:



  • getting your visa renewed while still in the country (even if that is not normally possible there may be exceptions)

  • making a voluntary departure instead of being deported





share|improve this answer




















  • Note: countries often charge you the expenses of deportation, if you can afford it.
    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jul 18 at 8:09










  • Countries tend to deport to the country you're a citizen of, as it's easiest (they're less likely and often not even allowed to deny you entry after all).
    – jwenting
    Jul 18 at 9:49

















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
7
down vote













To start by answering the question you asked, most countries that deport you will do it to a country of their choice. You may ask to be sent to somewhere specific, but they may or may not do that.



But to answer some questions you didn't ask, you should be actively engaging with immigration to sort this out. You should also get yourself a lawyer who can advise you. That may seem expensive but having a deportation on your record is going to seriously restrict your travel and employment in the future. You are going to need one to fight your civil case anyway. You really want to sort this out without being forced to leave, or having an overstay on your record.



Options you should be looking at include:



  • getting your visa renewed while still in the country (even if that is not normally possible there may be exceptions)

  • making a voluntary departure instead of being deported





share|improve this answer




















  • Note: countries often charge you the expenses of deportation, if you can afford it.
    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jul 18 at 8:09










  • Countries tend to deport to the country you're a citizen of, as it's easiest (they're less likely and often not even allowed to deny you entry after all).
    – jwenting
    Jul 18 at 9:49














up vote
7
down vote













To start by answering the question you asked, most countries that deport you will do it to a country of their choice. You may ask to be sent to somewhere specific, but they may or may not do that.



But to answer some questions you didn't ask, you should be actively engaging with immigration to sort this out. You should also get yourself a lawyer who can advise you. That may seem expensive but having a deportation on your record is going to seriously restrict your travel and employment in the future. You are going to need one to fight your civil case anyway. You really want to sort this out without being forced to leave, or having an overstay on your record.



Options you should be looking at include:



  • getting your visa renewed while still in the country (even if that is not normally possible there may be exceptions)

  • making a voluntary departure instead of being deported





share|improve this answer




















  • Note: countries often charge you the expenses of deportation, if you can afford it.
    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jul 18 at 8:09










  • Countries tend to deport to the country you're a citizen of, as it's easiest (they're less likely and often not even allowed to deny you entry after all).
    – jwenting
    Jul 18 at 9:49












up vote
7
down vote










up vote
7
down vote









To start by answering the question you asked, most countries that deport you will do it to a country of their choice. You may ask to be sent to somewhere specific, but they may or may not do that.



But to answer some questions you didn't ask, you should be actively engaging with immigration to sort this out. You should also get yourself a lawyer who can advise you. That may seem expensive but having a deportation on your record is going to seriously restrict your travel and employment in the future. You are going to need one to fight your civil case anyway. You really want to sort this out without being forced to leave, or having an overstay on your record.



Options you should be looking at include:



  • getting your visa renewed while still in the country (even if that is not normally possible there may be exceptions)

  • making a voluntary departure instead of being deported





share|improve this answer












To start by answering the question you asked, most countries that deport you will do it to a country of their choice. You may ask to be sent to somewhere specific, but they may or may not do that.



But to answer some questions you didn't ask, you should be actively engaging with immigration to sort this out. You should also get yourself a lawyer who can advise you. That may seem expensive but having a deportation on your record is going to seriously restrict your travel and employment in the future. You are going to need one to fight your civil case anyway. You really want to sort this out without being forced to leave, or having an overstay on your record.



Options you should be looking at include:



  • getting your visa renewed while still in the country (even if that is not normally possible there may be exceptions)

  • making a voluntary departure instead of being deported






share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jul 17 at 16:18









DJClayworth

30.3k577112




30.3k577112











  • Note: countries often charge you the expenses of deportation, if you can afford it.
    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jul 18 at 8:09










  • Countries tend to deport to the country you're a citizen of, as it's easiest (they're less likely and often not even allowed to deny you entry after all).
    – jwenting
    Jul 18 at 9:49
















  • Note: countries often charge you the expenses of deportation, if you can afford it.
    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jul 18 at 8:09










  • Countries tend to deport to the country you're a citizen of, as it's easiest (they're less likely and often not even allowed to deny you entry after all).
    – jwenting
    Jul 18 at 9:49















Note: countries often charge you the expenses of deportation, if you can afford it.
– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jul 18 at 8:09




Note: countries often charge you the expenses of deportation, if you can afford it.
– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jul 18 at 8:09












Countries tend to deport to the country you're a citizen of, as it's easiest (they're less likely and often not even allowed to deny you entry after all).
– jwenting
Jul 18 at 9:49




Countries tend to deport to the country you're a citizen of, as it's easiest (they're less likely and often not even allowed to deny you entry after all).
– jwenting
Jul 18 at 9:49



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