Close X
Sunday, November 10, 2024
ADVT 
National

Minister didn't authorize fake travel docs for Afghans, says he didn't check email

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Apr, 2023 12:20 PM
  • Minister didn't authorize fake travel docs for Afghans, says he didn't check email

International Development Minister Harjit Sajjan told his fellow MPs Wednesday he did not know a Canadian senator was handing out unauthorized travel documents to hundreds of Afghans during the rise of the Taliban in 2021 because he wasn't checking his email at the time. 

Sen. Marilou McPhedran told the House immigration committee last week that Sajjan's then-chief of staff, George Young, had given her a template for a "visa facilitation letter" that people could use to clear checkpoints on their way to the airport to escape the country. 

She shared that template with several "trusted advocates," including the chief human rights officer with FIFA and a former Canadian Olympian.

McPhedran said she doesn't know how many letters were handed out, but believes it was about 640.

Sajjan was defence minister at the time and McPhedran said she copied him and several other ministers on many emails about her activities.

Sajjan told the committee he was so busy at the time he didn't have time to check his inbox. 

"During the time of the evacuation, I really didn't have the time to be able to check my emails," Sajjan told reporters after his committee appearance.  

Sajjan told the committee he was consumed 24/7 by continuous security updates about the situation in Afghanistan throughout August 2021 as Canadian Forces aided in the evacuation of Afghans.

Even when the federal election campaign period started on Aug. 15, 2021, Sajjan said he was entirely focused on the situation in Afghanistan until the final Canadian evacuation flight left the capital city of Kabul. 

He said he was aware of authentic visa facilitation letters issued by Global Affairs Canada, but didn't authorize anyone else to use them.

In a statement, the Immigration Department said it issued several authentic letters directly to Afghan nationals who were eligible to come to Canada to help them clear checkpoints, but didn't allow third parties to issue them on the government's behalf.

The situation was referred to the RCMP, which determined it cannot pursue a viable investigation.

Meanwhile the government's refusal to honour the documents to allow Afghans entry to Canada is now the subject of a court case. 

Conservative MP Michelle Remple Garner compared the minister's explanation to the excuse that the "dog ate my homework."

"The response 'I didn't check my email' was preposterous," she said after the meeting, highlighting what appears to her as a lack of oversight and fairness in the process. 

McPhedran tabled her emails with the committee but they have not yet been shared with members.

In a written statement sent to The Canadian Press on Wednesday, she thanked Sajjan for his commitment to getting Afghans, including women and girls at high risk, out of the country.

She also thanked him for his "appreciation of his then-chief of staff George Young for working diligently to try to save lives."

Young never told Sajjan that McPhedran was handing visa facilitation letters out, Sajjan said, but he wouldn't comment further on whether Young's alleged actions were appropriate or not.

He said he directed his staff to forward all people who were concerned about getting individuals out of Afghanistan to the appropriate interdepartmental team, but also described the frenzied atmosphere at the time.

NDP immigration critic Jenny Kwan said at the end of the day, the minister is responsible for the actions of his chief of staff. 

"I am dismayed with the minister's comments and a little bit in shock at the level of, frankly, incompetence, if that's how he operated," Kwan said. 

Conservative members of the committee filed a notice of motion to call Young to testify. 

"This testimony is going to be critical in terms of understanding exactly what happened, if there was authorization, why he undertook this and if he actually did it to begin with," Remple Garner said after the meeting. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds invest in safety improvements for cyclists and pedestrians along Surrey’s King George Boulevard

Feds invest in safety improvements for cyclists and pedestrians along Surrey’s King George Boulevard
Pedestrian safety measures and protected cycling infrastructure will be put in place between 96th and 108th avenues. Planned pedestrian safety improvements include wider sidewalks, curb extensions, new crosswalks and accessible curb ramps. 

Feds invest in safety improvements for cyclists and pedestrians along Surrey’s King George Boulevard

Two pedestrians killed in Quebec crash: police

Two pedestrians killed in Quebec crash: police
Sgt. Hélène St-Pierre said the 38-year-old driver, a local resident, turned himself in to police and was arrested under suspicion of committing a fatal hit and run. One man who died was in his 60s, and the other was in his 70s.    

Two pedestrians killed in Quebec crash: police

B.C. cautious but encouraged by bail reform moves

B.C. cautious but encouraged by bail reform moves
British Columbia's attorney general says the province is treading carefully to ensure the overincarceration of Indigenous people and other racialized groups is not made worse by proposed federal changes to the bail system.

B.C. cautious but encouraged by bail reform moves

Canada on sidelines as allies move ahead on AUKUS

Canada on sidelines as allies move ahead on AUKUS
That includes formalizing American and British plans to help Australia develop a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines in response to growing concerns about China's actions in the Indo-Pacific region.    

Canada on sidelines as allies move ahead on AUKUS

Eight skunks found dead in B.C. had avian flu

Eight skunks found dead in B.C. had avian flu
British Columbia's Ministry of Agriculture says the skunks were infected with the same H5N1 strain that has caused the deaths of millions of domestic poultry since the outbreak began in April last year. The skunks were found in residential areas in both cities and were taken to B.C.'s Animal Health Centre over concerns they may have been deliberately poisoned.

Eight skunks found dead in B.C. had avian flu

Water taxi crash in B.C. prompts report's caution

Water taxi crash in B.C. prompts report's caution
A report from the board says four of the five people aboard the Rocky Pass were injured when the boat came to an abrupt stop on the rocks on Jan. 25, 2022. The operator, who had 20 years of experience captaining the taxi, was using GPS in very foggy conditions when the navigation device froze.

Water taxi crash in B.C. prompts report's caution