Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

NDP's Jenny Kwan Says Liberals Are Misleading Asylum Seekers Over Border

The Canadian Press, 23 Aug, 2017 12:08 PM
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government is misleading people when it says there's no advantage to crossing illegally into Canada to seek asylum, NDP MP Jenny Kwan says.
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made those comments over the weekend as the Liberals have become more assertive in their efforts to tamp down the volume of asylum seekers. Nearly 7,000 have arrived in the last six weeks, mostly via Quebec.
     
    But in a letter to Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen, Kwan suggests there is in fact an advantage.
     
    If they go the legal way, she says, they'll be turned away, because of the agreement between Canada and the U.S. that precludes people from making asylum claims at official land border crossings.
     
    "Under international law, once they have crossed the border Canada must take them in and process their refugee claims," Kwan said in the letter, sent late Tuesday.
     
    "If the prime minister was serious about reducing unsanctioned border crossings, let alone truly welcoming refugees, he would have already suspended the Safe Third Country Agreement."
     
    The Liberal government has repeatedly insisted there's no reason to suspend the deal, noting that the asylum system in the United States is still functioning and the country remains open to granting people refuge.
     
    In her letter, Kwan points to violent clashes between white nationalists and counter protesters in Virginia earlier this month as a sign of increased insecurity for all minorities.
     
     
    But more so, she said, the influx of people into Canada makes it clear they no longer feel the U.S. is safe. 
     
    The government is ignoring what should be a manageable issue, she said.
     
    "Given the current trend of anti-immigration and anti-refugee rhetoric throughout the developed world, maintaining the highest degree of public confidence in Canada's immigration system should be a top priority for your government to reduce the risk of those views taking hold in Canada," she wrote. 
     
    The federal-provincial task force set up last week to oversee the surge of asylum seekers is set to meet today in Montreal. The prime minister is to take part in the meeting and will talk to Haitian community leaders later in the day.
     
    The agenda includes the next steps to manage the surge, both in terms of increasing resources available to process refugee claims and making sure the communities in which the asylum seekers are now living have the resources available to help them.
     
    In her letter, Kwan notes the increased volume of asylum seekers hasn't been matched so far with a single extra dollar for the settlement agencies that will eventually help absorb them.
     
     
    In an interview Tuesday, Hussen said settlement funding being provided by the government is currently at historic levels and the system has the capacity to handle the demands being made by the new arrivals.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Court Orders Insurance Firm To Pay For Man's Emergency Surgery In U.S.

    B.C. Court Orders Insurance Firm To Pay For Man's Emergency Surgery In U.S.
    VICTORIA — An insurance company that refused to pay for a British Columbia man's emergency heart surgery has been ordered by a B.C. Supreme Court judge in Victoria to cover the US$180,000 bill.

    B.C. Court Orders Insurance Firm To Pay For Man's Emergency Surgery In U.S.

    Man Climbs Down From Crane After 3-Hour Negotiation

    Man Climbs Down From Crane After 3-Hour Negotiation
    Toronto police and firefighters had to deal with another construction crane climber on Wednesday night.

    Man Climbs Down From Crane After 3-Hour Negotiation

    'Unruly Passenger' Arrested After Air Canada Flight Returns To Toronto

    TORONTO — An Air Canada flight en route to Hungary was flown back to Toronto's Pearson International Airport early Thursday after an unruly passenger was allegedly involved in an altercation that left a flight attendant injured.

    'Unruly Passenger' Arrested After Air Canada Flight Returns To Toronto

    Police Seek International Victims Of 65-year-old Man Who Posed Online As Boy

    Police Seek International Victims Of 65-year-old Man Who Posed Online As Boy
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Police are looking for victims of a 65-year-old Newfoundland man who posed as a teenage boy and exploited children online.

    Police Seek International Victims Of 65-year-old Man Who Posed Online As Boy

    Trump Leaked Phone Call: 'Don't Worry About Canada,' Says He's Happy With Trade

    WASHINGTON — A leaked transcript of a Donald Trump phone call shows the president's private comments about trade with Canada, and suggests he had an overwhelmingly positive attitude about the northern neighbour as he took office.

    Trump Leaked Phone Call: 'Don't Worry About Canada,' Says He's Happy With Trade

    Toronto Home Sales Tank 40 Per Cent, Prices Down Nearly $175,000 Since April

    Toronto Home Sales Tank 40 Per Cent, Prices Down Nearly $175,000 Since April
    The number of transactions fell 40.4 per cent in July compared to the same month last year, driven by fewer sales of detached homes in Toronto and its surrounding areas.

    Toronto Home Sales Tank 40 Per Cent, Prices Down Nearly $175,000 Since April