Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Latest Stats Show Illegal Border Crossings Continued To Decline In November

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2017 12:00 AM
    OTTAWA — A decision by the Trump administration to yank protected status for thousands of Haitians doesn't appear to have prompted a new surge of asylum seekers at the Canada-U.S. border.
     
    Data published Tuesday by the federal government show the RCMP stopped 1,623 people in November, down from 1,890 in October.
     
    The figures represent a marked drop from August, when the RCMP stopped over 5,000 people in Quebec alone as they crossed into Canada to seek asylum.
     
    Many were believed to be propelled north by an impending change to U.S. immigration policy that would see the resumption of deportations to Haiti, following a pause instituted after the 2010 earthquake.
     
    The U.S. formally announced in November that temporary protected status for Haitians would be lifted in 2019, but Canadian officials had expressed hope a new surge of asylum seekers wouldn't materialize.
     
     
    Since the summer spike, Canadian officials embarked on a massive outreach effort in the U.S. to dispel myths about the Canadian asylum system and said those efforts were bearing fruit.
     
    But they've also said they remain on guard against the potential for future waves of would-be refugees and are ready to spool up a response in short order should one materialize.
     
    The data released Tuesday suggest that, overall, asylum claims filed in Canada dropped slightly last month.
     
    Canada Border Services Agency and the Immigration Department reported processing just over 4,000 requests, down from 4,760 in October.
     
    In total, the two agencies have now processed over 45,000 asylum claims this year — more than double the number of claims they dealt with last year.
     
    Once those claims are processed, they're referred to the Immigration and Refugee Board for a hearing.
     
    The board is grappling with a volume of cases not seen in nearly 10 years and has implemented several measures designed to speed up the process and avoid growing backlogs.
     
     
    But many of those decisions were taken by chairperson Mario Dion, who is now the Liberal government's choice to replace outgoing ethics commissioner Mary Dawson, leaving his position at the IRB vacant.
     
    An interim chairperson is expected to be named in the new year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surrey Basketball Player Raphael Alcoreza Dies In Hospital After Collapsing During Game

    Surrey Basketball Player Raphael Alcoreza Dies In Hospital After Collapsing During Game
    Raphael Alcoreza, A Grade 12 Student At Panorama Ridge Secondary, Went Into Cardiac Arrest During A Gam

    Surrey Basketball Player Raphael Alcoreza Dies In Hospital After Collapsing During Game

    WATCH: Song Breaks Out On Flight When Attendant Sees Men Of The Deeps On Board

    WATCH: Song Breaks Out On Flight When Attendant Sees Men Of The Deeps On Board
    The group, sitting about seven rows deep, broke into a version of "Dust in the Air" that filled the plane as it cruised mid-flight.

    WATCH: Song Breaks Out On Flight When Attendant Sees Men Of The Deeps On Board

    Critics Decry Ban On Sexual Touching At Strip Clubs In London, Ont.

    Critics Decry Ban On Sexual Touching At Strip Clubs In London, Ont.
    A municipal ban on sexual touching in strip clubs is putting sex workers at risk, hampering their ability to make money and denigrating their autonomy, according to some activists in London, Ont.

    Critics Decry Ban On Sexual Touching At Strip Clubs In London, Ont.

    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Under Fire For Thanking Chamber Chair For Wearing High Heels

    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Under Fire For Thanking Chamber Chair For Wearing High Heels
    "I want to thank Johanna for dressing up. I want to thank her for those heels. I notice they are a foot high," Pallister said to an audience of business people.

    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Under Fire For Thanking Chamber Chair For Wearing High Heels

    Russian Man Sentenced For Smuggling People From Canada Into U.S.

    Russian Man Sentenced For Smuggling People From Canada Into U.S.
    The U.S. Attorney's Office in Albany says Nikolay Souslov was sentenced Thursday to three years in prison for his conviction in May on alien smuggling charges.

    Russian Man Sentenced For Smuggling People From Canada Into U.S.

    'Targeted' Shooting In South Surrey: One Man Sent To Hospital

    'Targeted' Shooting In South Surrey: One Man Sent To Hospital
    Surrey RCMP say a man suffering from gunshot injuries was transported to hospital in serious condition following a shooting this morning in the 17000 block of 21st Avenue.

    'Targeted' Shooting In South Surrey: One Man Sent To Hospital