Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Current Data Suggests Feds Will Miss Year-end Syrian Refugee Resettlement Target

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2015 01:43 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government appears likely to miss its latest target to resettle 10,000 Syrians by the end of this year.
     
    According to analysis of current statistics on the Immigration department's website, approximately 6,239 Syrians will have arrived in Canada by midnight on Dec. 31, if all the government flights that are scheduled arrive on time.
     
    That doesn't include any arrivals on commercial flights.
     
    As of Dec. 28, a total of 3,701 Syrians had arrived in Canada, about 60 per cent of whom are being supported by private groups.
     
    Storms delayed flights earlier this week — and weather was cited by the Immigration minister last week as one of the reasons the government wasn't guaranteeing its year-end target could be met.
     
    The promise to resettle 10,000 Syrians by Dec. 31 began as a Liberal election campaign commitment to resettle 25,000 in the same time frame, and all of them were expected to be refugees assisted by the government.
     
    But that plan was amended in November to set a new goal of 10,000 arrivals by year's end, with most of them privately-sponsored.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. NDP Leader John Horgan Says Clear Vision Helping Party Expose Liberal Weaknesses

    B.C. NDP Leader John Horgan Says Clear Vision Helping Party Expose Liberal Weaknesses
    Horgan says he will continue to support energy alternatives to the Liberals' $9-billion Site C hydroelectric dam.

    B.C. NDP Leader John Horgan Says Clear Vision Helping Party Expose Liberal Weaknesses

    Canadian Health Care Wait Times Need Improvement, Fraser Institute Reports Say

    Canadian Health Care Wait Times Need Improvement, Fraser Institute Reports Say
    Two separate reports being released Tuesday have used different strategies to reach the same conclusion — Canada's health care wait times leave much to be desired.

    Canadian Health Care Wait Times Need Improvement, Fraser Institute Reports Say

    Justin Trudeau Liberals Planning To Give RCMP Right To Collective Bargaining

    Justin Trudeau Liberals Planning To Give RCMP Right To Collective Bargaining
    OTTAWA — RCMP officers would be allowed to engage in collective bargaining under legislation to be introduced by the Liberal government.

    Justin Trudeau Liberals Planning To Give RCMP Right To Collective Bargaining

    Sen. Mike Duffy Finally Takes To Witness Box To Testify In Own Defence

    Sen. Mike Duffy Finally Takes To Witness Box To Testify In Own Defence
    OTTAWA — Sen. Mike Duffy has finally begun testifying in his own defence against 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery.

    Sen. Mike Duffy Finally Takes To Witness Box To Testify In Own Defence

    Physician, Heal Thyself: MDs Willing To Help Patients Die May Face Emotional Fallout

    Physician, Heal Thyself: MDs Willing To Help Patients Die May Face Emotional Fallout
    In just weeks, barring an extension from the Supreme Court that would alter the timetable, Canadian doctors will enter a new era in the practice of medicine — one that gives them the legal right to help patients with unbearable suffering to end their lives.

    Physician, Heal Thyself: MDs Willing To Help Patients Die May Face Emotional Fallout

    Liberals Launch First Phase Of Inquiry Into Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women

    Liberals Launch First Phase Of Inquiry Into Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women
    OTTAWA — The federal Liberal government is kicking off what it calls the first phase of its inquiry into the tragic phenomenon of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls.

    Liberals Launch First Phase Of Inquiry Into Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women