Yes, a Colombian citizen can travel to the USA with a valid visa or through the Visa Waiver Program.
You can't get legal permanent residency (and by extension- citizenship) through a student visa. The only was is through family petition, work/investment petition, or asylum.
No. All you need is your passport.
If a citizen of Russia is attending school in the US on a Student Visa and becames pregrant by an American what happens to her Student Visa?
Having a student visa means that you are legally in the U.S. They could change their student visa to a working visa (H1. After that they can apply for a green card and later apply for citizenship. Getting a green card can take years. Only after getting a green card they will be able to apply for citizenship. The process can become much easier if that person gets married with an American citizen. Then, it will be a question of months.
His mother was a native born US citizen; his father was a citizen of Kenya living in the US on a student visa.
A US citizen cannot get a Colombian Passport unless he/she is Colombian him/herself. The only thing that a US citizen needs to go to Colombia is his/her US Passport. If planning to stay for more than 90 days , or have plans to study or work, he/she would also need a Colombian Visa on his US Passport. Now, if the US Citizen happens to be Colombian (dual citizen) , he/she is required to use a Colombian Passport to enter and exit the country.
A "visa" is kind of like temporary citizenship. A "work visa" allows you to work in a country you aren't a citizen of, and a "visa" allows you to live there.
Yes, you do. But if you are of Indian origin, then you should get Overseas Indian Citizenship visa.Overseas Indian Citizenship visa, is a sticker pasted on a visa page on your passport and has lifelongvalidity.
You need to get married to a Canadian citizen or apply for a Canadian Visa to get the citizenship of Canada.
Yes, an American citizen may sponsor a same-sex Mexican spouse for a visa, permanent residency and, ultimately, citizenship.
Someone with dual citizenship should be able to enter and reside in each country in which citizenship is held without obtaining a visa. That is part of what citizenship is about - the right to enter and travel freely in your country of citizenship.