I was wondering exactly the same!The grammar bully in me says you can’t be refused entry from a country (only to a country). Not sure that would stand up in court though
I think the issue is they’re trying to use a single preposition for 4 separate terms, 3 of which require the word “from” (deported, removed, excluded) and one of which requires the word “to” (refused entry). So it theoretically should say “have you ever been deported, removed, or excluded from, or refused entry to, any country” or something alone those lines. But I imagine they’ve tried to simplify it for readability. I’m not certain they’re signifying a different legal definition of “refused entry” through their choice of prepositionI was wondering exactly the same!
Maybe the use of the word ‘from’ is intended to limit the scope of the question… and apply it to situations where a person is already ‘in country’ and is departed from it?
If they had wanted the question to have a broader application they could have phrased it as ‘have you ever been excluded, deported or refused entry *by* a country’.
Use of the word ‘by’ fixes the issue of brevity and is clear. But they haven’t used that.I think the issue is they’re trying to use a single preposition for 4 separate terms, 3 of which require the word “from” (deported, removed, excluded) and one of which requires the word “to” (refused entry). So it theoretically should say “have you ever been deported, removed, or excluded from, or refused entry to, any country” or something alone those lines. But I imagine they’ve tried to simplify it for readability. I’m not certain they’re signifying a different legal definition of “refused entry” through their choice of preposition
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