Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau lashes out at Conservatives over PMO's role in refugee resettlement

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Oct, 2015 01:51 PM
    OTTAWA — Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau is spitting mad about reports that the Prime Minister's Office played a role in vetting Syrian refugees.
     
    The Conservative government ordered a review of some cases this summer as a result of intelligence reports that warned of possible security threats.
     
    A CTV News report, citing unnamed sources, says the Prime Minister's Office was actively discouraging the Department of Citizenship and Immigration from accepting Sunni or Shia Muslims.
     
    Trudeau says the PMO was making sure it could take political advantage of those families that were being accepted, something he calls "disgusting." 
     
    He says a Liberal government would "absolutely not" prioritize religious and ethnic minorities.
     
    Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the audit was ordered simply to ensure the most vulnerable were being selected without compromising national security, and insists his staff members were not involved in the selection process.
     
    Of the 11,300 Syrian refugees the government has committed to resettling since the start of the Syrian war, the vast majority are being resettled by private groups, mostly churches. 
     
    But the June audit was carried out only on government-assisted refugee cases, including those already in Canada and those still in the queue, forcing a halt to processing those files for several weeks.
     
    Harper and Tom Mulcair are both releasing their campaign platforms today — the Conservative leader in Richmond, B.C., and the NDP leader in Montreal.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    What Makes Canadians Proud? History Tops The List In Latest StatCan Survey

    The national statistical agency says 87 per cent of respondents to the 2013 General Social Survey said they're proud to be Canadian.

    What Makes Canadians Proud? History Tops The List In Latest StatCan Survey

    McDonald's Canada Introducing New Self-Serve Options And Table Service

    McDonald's Canada Introducing New Self-Serve Options And Table Service
    The company is overhauling the way it does business, adding self-service kiosks and bringing table delivery and dedicated wait staff to its restaurants — and hiring 15,000 people in the process.

    McDonald's Canada Introducing New Self-Serve Options And Table Service

    Ex-CBC Radio Host Jian Ghomeshi Pleads Not Guilty To Five Charges

    The former host of CBC Radio's cultural affairs show "Q'' is facing five charges including four counts of sexual assault and one count of overcoming resistance by choking.

    Ex-CBC Radio Host Jian Ghomeshi Pleads Not Guilty To Five Charges

    Plane That Crashed In Manitoba Last Month Had Wrong Fuel: Investigators

    The Transportation Safety Board says the Navajo Chieftain aircraft operated by Keystone Air had engine trouble shortly after takeoff on Sept. 15 

    Plane That Crashed In Manitoba Last Month Had Wrong Fuel: Investigators

    Vigil To Be Held For Family Devastated By Deadly Crash In Vaughan, Ontario

    Vigil To Be Held For Family Devastated By Deadly Crash In Vaughan, Ontario
    Nine-year-old Daniel Neville-Lake, his five-year-old brother Harrison, their two-year-old sister Milly and their 65-year-old grandfather died in the crash in Vaughan

    Vigil To Be Held For Family Devastated By Deadly Crash In Vaughan, Ontario

    Son And Grandson Of B.C. Premiers Takes Over As Chairman Of BC Hydro

    Son And Grandson Of B.C. Premiers Takes Over As Chairman Of BC Hydro
    Brad Bennett 's father served as B.C.'s premier and his grandfather, W.A.C Bennett, created BC Hydro when he led the province in the 1960s

    Son And Grandson Of B.C. Premiers Takes Over As Chairman Of BC Hydro