Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Refugee Advocates 'Shocked And Dismayed' Over Asylum Changes In Budget Bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Apr, 2019 07:32 PM

    OTTAWA — Refugee advocates are crying foul over proposed Liberal government changes to immigration laws that aim to keep would-be asylum seekers from entering Canada at unofficial border crossings.


    The Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers says the changes would rob vulnerable refugee claimants of fundamental human-rights protections.


    The Liberals are proposing to prevent asylum seekers from making a refugee claim in Canada if they have made a similar claim in certain other countries, including the United States.


    The changes were quietly included in a 392-page omnibus budget bill tabled Monday in the House of Commons — a move that is even more upsetting to refugee advocates.


    Janet Dench, executive director of the Canadian Council for Refugees, says substantial changes to immigration laws like the ones being proposed ought to be given a full hearing in Parliament, rather than being slipped into a fast-tracked budget bill.


    Dench says her members — including more than 100 Canadian organizations that work directly with refugees and immigrants — are in a state of shock and dismay over the proposed changes, calling them a devastating attack on refugee rights in Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Methane-Snacking Crabs Suggest They Are Adapting To Climate Change: Report

    Crabs that have a normal diet of a type of plankton have been seen munching on methane-filled bacteria off British Columbia's coast 

    Methane-Snacking Crabs Suggest They Are Adapting To Climate Change: Report

    More Help On The Way For Family That Lost Seven Children To House Fire: MP

    Offers of support and donations continue to pour in for Kawthar and Ebraheim Barho, Liberal MP Andy Fillmore said in an interview Tuesday.

    More Help On The Way For Family That Lost Seven Children To House Fire: MP

    New Brunswick Looks To Hydrogen From Seawater As Fuel For Future Power

    FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's Crown-owned power utility is partnering with a Florida-based company to develop power plants that would use hydrogen extracted from seawater as their fuel.

    New Brunswick Looks To Hydrogen From Seawater As Fuel For Future Power

    Man Facing Deportation To Italy More Than Two Decades After Conviction Loses Stay Request

    Man Facing Deportation To Italy More Than Two Decades After Conviction Loses Stay Request
    MONTREAL — A Quebec man convicted more than 20 years ago for his role in a Mafia-linked drug importation will be deported to his native Italy this week barring a last-minute reprieve from Ottawa.

    Man Facing Deportation To Italy More Than Two Decades After Conviction Loses Stay Request

    Measles Unlikely To Spread But Everyone Should Be Vaccinated: Vancouver Doctor

    Measles Unlikely To Spread But Everyone Should Be Vaccinated: Vancouver Doctor
    A medical health officer in Vancouver says measles is not expected to spread beyond a cluster of patients but anyone travelling to other parts of the world

    Measles Unlikely To Spread But Everyone Should Be Vaccinated: Vancouver Doctor

    Soldier Found Dead On New Brunswick Base Was Veteran Of Afghanistan, Bosnia

    Soldier Found Dead On New Brunswick Base Was Veteran Of Afghanistan, Bosnia
    OROMOCTO, N.B. — The Canadian Armed Forces has released the name of a soldier and Afghanistan veteran found dead at New Brunswick's Gagetown base on Monday.    

    Soldier Found Dead On New Brunswick Base Was Veteran Of Afghanistan, Bosnia