Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Border Services Agency Asked To Speed Up Refugee Removals

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Oct, 2018 04:59 PM
    OTTAWA — The Canada Border Services Agency should speed up its removals of failed refugee claimants who are still in Canada, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says.
     
     
    The CBSA has set a new target of completing 10,000 removals by the end of the 2018-19 fiscal year in March. This would mean an increase of 35 per cent from what's been normal over the last two years.
     
     
    Goodale said Wednesday that the CBSA has been given $7.46 million more to ensure that all asylum seekers who have exhausted their legal avenues of appeal are removed from the country.
     
     
    "We've indicated that we have to pick up the pace in terms of that activity. We've provided some extra resources for CBSA to do the work that's necessary," Goodale said. "The law is clear. When a person has been found to be ineligible to be in Canada and they have exhausted all avenues of appeal then they become subject to removal and CBSA is obliged to remove people as rapidly as possible when they fall into that situation and they do that job quite literally every day."
     
     
    But Jean-Pierre Fortin, national president of the Customs and Immigration Union said the special inland enforcement officers who handle these removals were not told of the plan to set targets and speed up, let alone consulted. He said staff found out about the plans to hurry up refugee removals from seeing it in the news media.
     
     
    "The government didn't create any special team or hire new people to perform these targets. (Staff) are saying they don't really understand or know how it's going to be feasible," Fortin said. "Right now for them, they're overwhelmed already in their work, so when they saw that in the news, they said they don't understand."
     
     
    Fortin said these officers are at a loss as to how they will be able to increase their workload with no additional resources.
     
     
    "The No. 1 thing that the government needs to do is to make the announcement that they will be hiring more resources right now in order to meet those targets, in order to secure the land border next summer. They need to be prepared," Fortin said.
     
     
    By law, CBSA is required to enforce removal orders as soon as possible after all avenues of appeal have been exhausted.
     
     
    But many factors can impede a removal, such as other legal proceedings, temporary suspensions of removals in certain categories, missing travel documents, medical issues or applications for pre-removal risk assessments for those who are eligible.
     
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Wednesday that the government has been looking at ways of speeding up these cases to ensure Canada's immigration system remains an integrated system that functions properly.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NEB Orders Tighter Safety Measures At B.C. Site Of Natural Gas Pipeline Blast

    NEB Orders Tighter Safety Measures At B.C. Site Of Natural Gas Pipeline Blast
      VICTORIA — The National Energy Board has issued new safety orders for a pipeline explosion site in north-central British Columbia to strictly monitor natural gas flows to protect people and the environment.

    NEB Orders Tighter Safety Measures At B.C. Site Of Natural Gas Pipeline Blast

    Sea Lion In B.C. Suffering From Gunshot Wounds To The Head Euthanized

    Sea Lion In B.C. Suffering From Gunshot Wounds To The Head Euthanized
    VANCOUVER — A sea lion being treated for gunshots to the head has died at the Vancouver Aquarium's Marine Mammal Rescue Centre.

    Sea Lion In B.C. Suffering From Gunshot Wounds To The Head Euthanized

    Wildlife Group Files Complaint Against B.C. Conservation Service For Bear Death

    Wildlife Group Files Complaint Against B.C. Conservation Service For Bear Death
    VANCOUVER — The death of a female black bear that fell from a tree after being darted with a tranquilizer has prompted a wildlife group to file a complaint with the British Columbia Conservation Officer Service.

    Wildlife Group Files Complaint Against B.C. Conservation Service For Bear Death

    Canada Post Strikes Spread To Three Regions From Vancouver To New Brunswick

    OTTAWA — Vancouver and Niagara Falls, Ont., were added to the list of cities hit by postal disruptions this week as more Canadian Union of Postal Workers members walked off the job as part of rotating strikes.

    Canada Post Strikes Spread To Three Regions From Vancouver To New Brunswick

    Injured In Stone-Pelting In Kashmir’s Anantnag, Indian Soldier Dies

    While Sepoy Rajendra Singh, 22,  who was injured in stone-pelting in Kashmir’s Anantnag district on Thursday, succumbed to a head injury, Lance Naik Brajesh Kumar, 32, died in an encounter on the outskirts of Sopore in north Kashmir in which two militants were killed too. 

    Injured In Stone-Pelting In Kashmir’s Anantnag, Indian Soldier Dies

    Thieves Assault, Rob, Terminally Ill Cancer Patient In B.C.'s Southern Interior

    Thieves Assault, Rob, Terminally Ill Cancer Patient In B.C.'s Southern Interior
    SICAMOUS, B.C. — Police in British Columbia's southern Interior are investigating a home invasion in which a woman with terminal cancer suffered a broken nose when she was kicked in the face.

    Thieves Assault, Rob, Terminally Ill Cancer Patient In B.C.'s Southern Interior