Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Yet Another Death In Immigration Custody Sparks Anger Among Rights Groups

The Canadian Press, 09 Mar, 2016 11:57 AM
    TORONTO — The death of yet another immigration detainee in custody has sparked anger and raised alarm bells among human rights groups looking for elusive answers.
     
    The latest fatality, shrouded as usual in secrecy, occurred at the Toronto East Detention Centre on Monday, according to authorities.
     
    Canada Border Services Agency refused to provide any details as to the identity of the prisoner or the circumstances of the death.
     
    Rights groups called the death and the border agency's unwillingness to share information unacceptable.
     
    "Nobody should die while they are in the custody of CBSA," Mitch Goldberg, president of the Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers, said in a statement Wednesday.
     
    "The public needs answers. What was the cause of death? Could this death have been prevented? Did some action or inaction on the part of CBSA and the correctional facility that they use to house their detainees contribute to their deaths?"
     
    Critics have long denounced the Canadian system of potentially indefinite detention for foreigners — often in provincial jails that house criminals — who run afoul of immigration rules but may not be subject to any charges.
     
    They note at least 13 people have died in custody of Canadian immigration authorities since 2000.
     
     
    "This latest death is a further stain on CBSA's reputation and highlights the urgent need for reform of the way immigration detention is practised in this country," said Samer Muscati, with the University of Toronto international human rights program.
     
    CBSA announced the death in a release Tuesday.
     
    "The CBSA will also be reviewing the circumstances of the death," the release said. "The CBSA is not in a position to release further information while the investigation is ongoing."
     
    In a similar case last June, a cloak of secrecy descended on the death of a man in agency custody who died after being taken to a hospital in Peterborough, Ont. An agency statement, issued about 18 hours after the death, gave no further information about who he was, where he was from or how he died.
     
    Some information emerged later — the man was 39 and under escort from police to hospital — because the province's special investigations unit was called in. The unit said it would defer to the wishes of the man's family as to the release of his identity.
     
    Canadian immigration authorities routinely send detainees to provincial jails, something the president of the Canadian Council for Refugees called "deeply problematic."
     
    "CBSA must bear responsibility for the health and well-being of detainees, yet they have no direct supervision when detainees are in provincial jails," Loly Rico said in a statement.
     
    Critics said the latest death underscores the urgent need for independent oversight of Canada's border police, especially given their broad powers of arrest and detention.
     
    "CBSA remains alone among major Canadian law enforcement agencies in having no independent oversight," said Laura Track with the BC Civil Liberties Association.
     
    The issue also drew the attention of Amnesty International, which denounced the "glaring oversight gap."
     
    The group's secretary general in Canada called it "unconscionable" that someone could die in immigration custody, but no independent agency has a mandate to investigate and ensure human rights obligations have been met.
     
    Last June, a University of Toronto report found almost one-third of foreigners detained in Canada are placed in facilities intended for criminals. Such detentions violated international human-rights law and amounted to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, the report said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties

    RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties
    A workplace investigation that followed the shooting of two Mounties in Alberta last year says the RCMP contravened Canada Labour Code health and safety rules.

    RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter
    oronto author Rosemary Sullivan is behind "Stalin's Daughter: The Extraordinary and Tumultuous Life of Svetlana Alliluyeva," which has won the $40,000 British Columbia National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction and the $60,000 Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction.

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter

    Ten Honoured For Saving Lives In Tofino, B.C., Whale-Watching Tragedy

    Ten Honoured For Saving Lives In Tofino, B.C., Whale-Watching Tragedy
    The B.C. and Yukon Lifesaving Society awarded 10 people the Governor's Gold Award on Saturday.

    Ten Honoured For Saving Lives In Tofino, B.C., Whale-Watching Tragedy

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash
    A female passenger in the back seat of the car was pronounced dead at the scene.

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash

    Alberta Legislature To Begin Session Under Shadow Of Looming $10 Billion Deficit

    Finance Minister Joe Ceci has already announced that with no end in sight to bargain basement oil prices, the budget he unveils in early April will be about double the original deficit estimate of $5.4 billion.

    Alberta Legislature To Begin Session Under Shadow Of Looming $10 Billion Deficit

    Deciding On Assisted Death In Context Of Mental Illness Highly Complex: Experts

    The court made no specific pronouncement about medically assisted dying for those with a psychiatric illness, and that has left mental health experts wondering how its  decision might be interpreted — and what that could mean for such a vulnerable segment of the population.

    Deciding On Assisted Death In Context Of Mental Illness Highly Complex: Experts