Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gaza evacuees in Canada will need mental-health, housing supports: refugee council

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2023 03:57 PM
  • Gaza evacuees in Canada will need mental-health, housing supports: refugee council

Evacuees who escape from the Gaza Strip will need help to access mental-health care and housing, as well as assistance to get other family members out of the embattled Palestinian territory, the Canadian Council for Refugees said Thursday.

The slow trickle of people allowed through the highly controlled Rafah border crossing out of Gaza has so far included 107 peopleon Canada's list of anticipated evacuees, and they are only allowed to remain in Egypt for 72 hours.

The list includes Canadian citizens and permanent residents, as well as eligible family members who don't have immigration status in Canada.

Some of the first few Canadians to escape the constant bombardment in Gaza arrived at the Toronto Pearson International Airport on Thursday.

"They're definitely going to need support and outreach, coming out of a very traumatic time," said Gauri Sreenivasan, the council's co-executive director.

For those who arrive without immigration status, it will be especially important to make sure they have access to settlement services that are tailored to the trauma they've endured for the last month, Sreenivasan said.

"This will include the need for supports, for identifying what they need in terms of housing and support for work permits," she said. 

"Critically, they will need information and support in processing the paperwork that's required both for themselves here, but (also) for other family members."

Reuniting families outside of Gaza will be key in setting them up for success in Canada, she said. 

Services and immigration status will have to be determined based on individual circumstances once people make their way to Canada, Immigration Minister Marc Miller said in an interview this week.

The federal government has been working to secure the safe passage of more than 500 people with connections to Canada as part of ongoing negotiations between Israel and Egypt that are being mediated by Qatar, the foreign affairs minister said Thursday.

Global Affairs Canada says it is also aware of reports that four Canadian citizens got out with the help of a third party.

Miller says family members without Canadian citizenship or permanent residency status will be offered temporary status so they can remain in Canada, and if they need work permits, his department will work on that as well.

"I think it's something we'll tackle as the case may be," he said in an interview on Monday.

People who come to Canada as family members should be able to apply for permanent residency under the family reunification immigration program, Sreenivasan said.

As for settlement services and income support, Miller said new arrivals from Gaza will be dependent on their Canadian families. The Immigration Department will assess their needs from there.

"We'll have to look at what that means, and look at the volume," he said.

"I don't know the financial situation of a lot of people leaving. I can't suspect that it's great, but I don't presume people don't have funds, either."

The Gaza Strip has been under almost constant bombardment since Israel launched a retaliatory attack on Hamas for the Oct. 7 incursion that killed 1,400 Israelis. Another 240 were taken from Israel into Gaza by the armed militant group.

The number of Palestinians killed in the war passed 10,500, including more than 4,300 children, the Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza said on Wednesday.

For now, while the border remains completely closed to most of the 2.3 million residents in the occupied territory, Canadian immigration officials have not yet turned their mind to the possibility of welcoming refugees from the region.

"There are a number of security considerations and policy considerations that are compelling us to focus on Canadians. We want to get Canadians out," Miller said.

But he added that Canada will be humane if people manage to escape the war and flee to its borders.

The Canadian Council for Refugees said the need to get Canadians out should be coupled with much stronger diplomatic action from Canada in calling for a ceasefire

"There is no safety for those trying to move within Gaza or out of Gaza, or for those who are staying," Sreenivasan said.

"The overwhelming urgency for Canada is to become much more formal at calling not just for a pause, but for a sustainable ceasefire to end the attack on civilians."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other government officials have stopped short of calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, and have instead called for significant "humanitarian pauses" that are long enough to get aid into Gaza and evacuate people from the area. 

Israel has agreed to put in place four-hour daily humanitarian pauses in its assault on Hamas in northern Gaza, the White House announced on Thursday.

Miller said that once Canadians are out of Gaza, the next consideration will be whether the government needs to find a way to get Canadians out of neighbouring Lebanon.

Israeli troops and Hezbollah militants and their allies have been clashing along the Israel-Lebanon border since the start of the war.

"That is the next set of considerations that I hope does not come to fruition, because that means that the conflict has escalated," Miller said.

In the meantime, refugee advocates have encouraged the Immigration Department to speed up the processing of refugee claims for Palestinians and others in the region that were already underway. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Premier Eby condemns rise in hate crimes in B.C. stemming from Israeli-Hamas conflict

Premier Eby condemns rise in hate crimes in B.C. stemming from Israeli-Hamas conflict
British Columbia Premier David Eby is condemning the rise in hate crimes in the province, driven by the Israeli-Hamas war. Eby says in a written statement that his office has heard "directly" about a number of acts of antisemitism, such as the vandalism of a rabbi's home and two Jewish women being threatened with violence after a rally.  

Premier Eby condemns rise in hate crimes in B.C. stemming from Israeli-Hamas conflict

Man who jumped off Alex Fraser Bridge couldn't have been saved: IIO

Man who jumped off Alex Fraser Bridge couldn't have been saved: IIO
British Columbia's police watchdog has found that officers could not have prevented the death of a man who jumped off a bridge in Delta this week.  The Independent Investigations Office of B-C says that officers responded to a call on Monday to find the man in distress and standing outside the railing on the side of the Alex Fraser Bridge.

Man who jumped off Alex Fraser Bridge couldn't have been saved: IIO

Driver shot multiple times: NWPD

Driver shot multiple times: NWPD
The New Westminster Police Department say they are looking into a report from a driver who says another driver shot his vehicle multiple times Wednesday afternoon. Police say a man reported that the driver of a black, two door Infiniti vehicle shouted at him before pointing a gun and shooting numerous times, resulting in a broken passenger side window.

Driver shot multiple times: NWPD

Parks Canada says whirling disease could decimate fish, respect B.C. closures

Parks Canada says whirling disease could decimate fish, respect B.C. closures
Parks Canada officials say they're closely watching lakes and rivers in Kootenay and Yoho national parks for a parasite that could "decimate" as much as 90 per cent of young trout and salmon. The first suspected case of the disease in British Columbia was found in September in Emerald Lake, in Yoho National Park, prompting the closure of the lake and other nearby waterways. 

Parks Canada says whirling disease could decimate fish, respect B.C. closures

Hundreds arrested for shoplifting in latest Vancouver police blitz

Hundreds arrested for shoplifting in latest Vancouver police blitz
A police crackdown on violent and chronic shoplifters in Vancouver has ended in 258 arrests and the recovery of almost $57,000 in stolen goods.  Vancouver police say the arrests were made during a two-week operation in September, which was co-ordinated with other Lower Mainland police departments, resulting in another 82 arrests in Delta, Langley, Richmond and Burnaby. 

Hundreds arrested for shoplifting in latest Vancouver police blitz

U.S. man lost at sea is rescued by Canadian crew west of Vancouver Island

U.S. man lost at sea is rescued by Canadian crew west of Vancouver Island
Sharp-eyed mariners on a Canadian vessel have rescued a U.S. man, one day after the United States Coast Guard ended its search for a commercial fishing boat from Washington state with two people aboard. U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Steve Strohmaier says crew aboard the Canadian fish boat Ocean Sunset spotted a life-raft drifting in open ocean far west of Vancouver Island on Thursday.  

U.S. man lost at sea is rescued by Canadian crew west of Vancouver Island