Refugee/Migrant Crisis

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
113,712
12,931
113
Low Earth Orbit
Which country has the most Palestinian refugees?

Population figures
  • Jordan 3,240,000.
  • Israel 1,650,000.
  • Syria 630,000.
  • Chile 500,000 (largest Palestinian community outside the Middle East).
  • Lebanon 402,582.
  • Saudi Arabia 280,245.
  • Egypt 270,245.
  • United States 255,000 (the largest concentrations in Chicago, Detroit and Los Angeles; History of Palestinians in Los Angeles).
  • Canada 50,975
(Canada has less than Yemen, but more than Australia)
If they leave, it's permanent. Israel won't let them back. Refugees are a check-in the win column for Israel.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Canada to offer humanitarian visas to those fleeing Sudan if relatives pay costs
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Dylan Robertson
Published Dec 28, 2023 • 2 minute read

Ottawa is offering a lifeline to people fleeing an escalating civil war in Sudan if they have relatives in Canada who agree to financially support them.


Immigration Minister Marc Miller says this new humanitarian pathway is for both Sudanese citizens and other foreign citizens who lived in the northeastern African countrywhen conflict broke out in mid-April.


The program applies to people who are either a child, grandchild, parent, grandparent or sibling to a Canadian citizen or permanent resident.

Those relatives have to agree to financially support them, though Ottawa has not said how much money this will require.

People must apply for the program and complete the typical security and biometric screening used for visa applicants, such as fingerprinting.

Duelling militias began a civil war in Sudan this spring that has caused some five million people to flee, including many who were already refugees from neighbouring countries.


A week ago, the United Nations Office on Genocide Prevention asked countries to speak out about what it calls rising, ethnically motivated violence in the country that includes indiscriminate killings and attacks against civilians.

Miller spoke about the situation in a Thursday press release announcing the new immigration measures.

“The ongoing conflict in Sudan, as well as the humanitarian situation on the ground, remains deeply concerning,” Miller is quoted saying in the statement.

“Canada will continue to help those in need and uphold our humanitarian traditions as a country.”

Sudan’s war began in mid-April after months of tensions between military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan and commander Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces or RSF.


Both generals led a military coup in October 2021 that derailed Sudan’s short-lived transition to democracy following a popular uprising that forced the removal of President Omar al-Bashir in April 2019.

The conflict in Sudan has wrecked the country and killed up to 9,000 people as of October, according to the United Nations. However, activists and doctors’ groups say the real toll is far higher.

More than seven million people were forced out of their homes, including more than 1.5 million who have sought refuge in neighboring countries, according to the UN figures.

Chad received more than 500,000 refugees, mostly from Sudan’s western region of Darfur, where the RSF has largely taken control.

The fighting spread this month to the Jazeera province of Sudan. It had been a safe haven for families displaced by the fighting, which the UN says is most intense around the capital, Khartoum.

Canada has previously allocated $165 million in humanitarian aid for those affected by the conflict, and also fast-tracked immigration applications and waived fees for certain people who have fled.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Afghan refugee in Oregon training flight crash that killed 3 ignored instructor’s advice, NTSB says
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Published Dec 29, 2023 • 3 minute read

PORTLAND, Ore. — A former Afghan Air Force pilot training for a commercial licence in Oregon ignored his flight instructor’s advice to not return to a small airport because of low visibility. The plane later crashed, killing the pilot and the other two passengers on board, according to a preliminary federal report of the accident released Friday.


All three men killed in the accident Dec. 16 were former Afghan pilots who fought with the American military. Local nonprofit Salem for Refugees said it resettled the men in the Salem area last spring.


The pilot, Mohammad Hussain Musawi, 35, and the two passengers, Mohammad Bashir Safdari, 35, and Ali Jan Ferdawsi, 29, died in the crash near Independence, a small city in the Willamette Valley about 19 kilometres southwest of Salem.

The National Transportation Safety Board’s report said an examination of the airframe and the engine of the Cessna 172G airplane revealed no mechanical malfunctions or failures.

The plane’s owner allowed the pilot to use the Cessna to get his private pilot’s certificate and to obtain his instrument rating and commercial pilot’s certificate, the report said.


Musawi told his flight instructor that he and a pilot-rated passenger would fly from Independence to the McMinnville airport to practice instrument approaches, the report said. The two small cities are about 30 miles apart by road.

Two approaches were made at McMinnville before the plane landed. The flight instructor, who was electronically monitoring the flight, called Musawi and advised him not to return to Independence because of low visibility of about 500 feet due to fog, the report said.

Musawi told the instructor that he would fly to Independence, assess the situation and either attempt to land, divert to Salem or return to McMinnville, the report said. He also said he had picked up a second pilot-rated passenger in McMinnville.


Air traffic control recordings indicate the pilot made two position reports on approach that included his intention to land in Independence, the report said. He also electronically activated the pilot-controlled landing lights to medium intensity.

The pilot overshot the runway to the east, overcorrected and overshot it to the west and came to rest inverted on the edge of an open field next to airport property, the report said.

A fire reduced the fuselage to ash, but the wings did not catch on fire, the report said. The engine had separated from the airplane, and it was found about 60 feet (18 metres) northwest of the main wreckage, the report said.

The plane likely first hit an 80-foot utility pole, located about 60 feet (18 metres) southeast of the wreckage.


The pole was in three pieces. The top 4 feet (1.22 metres) of the pole shattered and was strewn in the wreckage. The middle section, about 12 feet (3.66 metres) in length, fell onto the right wing, and about 69 feet (21 metres) of the original pole remained standing.

The report noted that the pole had a dual-lamp, red warning light attached to the top, and it was also found in the wreckage. At least o ne power line was found among the wreckage.

NTSB preliminary reports don’t assign a cause to airplane crashes, but more information is usually contained in final reports released months later.

More than 1,400 Afghans have resettled as refugees in Oregon since 2021, according to the state’s department of human services.

The pilots’ families have remained in Afghanistan while waiting to be able to come to the U.S., according to the Afghan American Development Group, a nonprofit that helps some 600 former Afghan military aviation personnel with refugee resettlement, job training and family reunification.

The group created a GoFundMe page to help support the pilots’ families and cover funeral expenses. The men hadn’t seen their families since August 2021, when the Taliban swept back to power after seizing the Afghan capital Kabul.

As the Taliban advanced on Kabul, the pilots were among those who flew their aircraft, under fire, to the neighboring country of Tajikistan to prevent Air Force equipment from falling into the hands of the group’s fighters, said Russ Pritchard, the nonprofit’s CEO.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Liberal immigration policy sabotaging Liberal housing policy
Everyone in the Liberal government is saying something has to be done about the immigration policies it created that have contributed to today's affordable housing crisis


Author of the article:Lorrie Goldstein
Published Dec 30, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 4 minute read

Federal Housing Minister Sean Fraser’s year-end announcement in an interview with The Canadian Press that the Trudeau government will unveil a “renewed” housing plan in 2024 raises the question of what happened to all of its previous housing plans?


The Liberals have been coming up with new housing plans ever since the 2015 election that brought them to power.


In 2017, they announced their National Housing Strategy – originally a 10-year, $40-billion plan which has since grown to more than $82 billion, slated to run until March 2028, “to give more Canadians a place to call home.”

The problem is their immigration policies are undermining their housing policies, presumably one of the things their latest “renewed” housing plan is intended to address, in another example of the Liberals announcing new plans to fix problems caused by their previous plans.

When Fraser was immigration minister last year, he proudly announced the Liberals’ “ambitious” plan to boost Canada’s annual immigration targets to 465,000 permanent residents this year, 485,000 in 2024 and 500,000 in 2025, thus putting enormous pressure on Canada’s housing market and undermining housing affordability.



The Liberals have since announced their target for 2026 will be another 500,000 permanent residents, compared to 272,000 when the Liberals came to power in 2015.

Canada will also accept a record 900,000 international students this year compared to 352,000 in 2015, according to current Immigration Minister Marc Miller.

Now add to that the fact Canada admitted 220,000 temporary foreign workers last year, an increase of 68% compared to 2021, according to a Globe and Mail analysis of federal data.

The cumulative result of these policies, as Statistics Canada reported earlier this month, is that, “Canada’s population was estimated at 40,528,396 on Oct. 1, 2023, an increase of 430,635 people (+1.1%) from July 1 … the highest population growth rate in any quarter since the second quarter of 1957 (+1.2%), when Canada’s population grew by 198,000 people …

“Canada’s total population growth for the first nine months of 2023 (+1,030,378 people) had already exceeded the total growth for any other full-year period since Confederation in 1867, including 2022, when there was a record growth.”



Now, everyone in the Liberal government from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on down is saying something has to be done about the immigration policies it created that have contributed to today’s affordable housing crisis.

But the Liberals are focusing on abuses in the international student and temporary worker programs, rather than their dramatic increases to Canada’s immigration levels.

On that issue, the Liberals insist, Canada needs more immigrants to build more housing, because, as Miller put it in August, “Without those skilled workers coming from outside Canada, we absolutely cannot build the homes and meet the demand that exists currently today.”

But numerous critics have pointed out the logical fallacy with this argument.


As the TD Bank warned: “Continuing with a high-growth immigration strategy could widen the housing shortfall by about a half-million units within just two years. Recent government policies to accelerate construction are unlikely to offer a stop-gap due to the short time period and the natural lags in adjusting supply.”

The National Bank of Canada cautioned: “The federal government’s decision to open the immigration floodgates during the most aggressive monetary tightening cycle in a generation has created a record imbalance between housing and demand … As housing affordability pressures continue to mount across the country, we believe Ottawa should consider revising its immigration targets to allow supply to catch up with demand.”


BMO (Bank of Montreal) reported, “Heightened immigration flows designed to ease labour supply pressure immediately add to the housing demand they are trying to meet … The infrastructure in place and the industry’s ability to build clearly can’t support unchecked levels of demand, so the affordability conundrum continues.”

Deputy Bank of Canada governor Toni Gravelle noted in a recent speech, as reported by The Canadian Press, that, “this jump in demographic demand coupled with the existing structural supply issues could explain why rent inflation continues to climb in Canada. It also helps explain, in part, why housing prices have not fallen as much as we had expected.”

To be sure, Canada’s affordable housing shortage isn’t solely attributable to federal immigration policy – high interest rates are another factor along with the impact of provincial and municipal housing policies.

Long term, the Trudeau government argues, Canada needs high immigration levels to provide the workers of the future, due to low domestic birth rates.

But that said, and as the Trudeau government continues to announce new deals with municipalities to build more housing, remember their current high immigration polices are undermining those efforts.

lgoldstein@postmedia.com
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Taxslave2

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,047
3,834
113
Edmonton
Liberal immigration policy sabotaging Liberal housing policy
Everyone in the Liberal government is saying something has to be done about the immigration policies it created that have contributed to today's affordable housing crisis


Author of the article:Lorrie Goldstein
Published Dec 30, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 4 minute read

Federal Housing Minister Sean Fraser’s year-end announcement in an interview with The Canadian Press that the Trudeau government will unveil a “renewed” housing plan in 2024 raises the question of what happened to all of its previous housing plans?


The Liberals have been coming up with new housing plans ever since the 2015 election that brought them to power.


In 2017, they announced their National Housing Strategy – originally a 10-year, $40-billion plan which has since grown to more than $82 billion, slated to run until March 2028, “to give more Canadians a place to call home.”

The problem is their immigration policies are undermining their housing policies, presumably one of the things their latest “renewed” housing plan is intended to address, in another example of the Liberals announcing new plans to fix problems caused by their previous plans.

When Fraser was immigration minister last year, he proudly announced the Liberals’ “ambitious” plan to boost Canada’s annual immigration targets to 465,000 permanent residents this year, 485,000 in 2024 and 500,000 in 2025, thus putting enormous pressure on Canada’s housing market and undermining housing affordability.



The Liberals have since announced their target for 2026 will be another 500,000 permanent residents, compared to 272,000 when the Liberals came to power in 2015.

Canada will also accept a record 900,000 international students this year compared to 352,000 in 2015, according to current Immigration Minister Marc Miller.

Now add to that the fact Canada admitted 220,000 temporary foreign workers last year, an increase of 68% compared to 2021, according to a Globe and Mail analysis of federal data.

The cumulative result of these policies, as Statistics Canada reported earlier this month, is that, “Canada’s population was estimated at 40,528,396 on Oct. 1, 2023, an increase of 430,635 people (+1.1%) from July 1 … the highest population growth rate in any quarter since the second quarter of 1957 (+1.2%), when Canada’s population grew by 198,000 people …

“Canada’s total population growth for the first nine months of 2023 (+1,030,378 people) had already exceeded the total growth for any other full-year period since Confederation in 1867, including 2022, when there was a record growth.”



Now, everyone in the Liberal government from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on down is saying something has to be done about the immigration policies it created that have contributed to today’s affordable housing crisis.

But the Liberals are focusing on abuses in the international student and temporary worker programs, rather than their dramatic increases to Canada’s immigration levels.

On that issue, the Liberals insist, Canada needs more immigrants to build more housing, because, as Miller put it in August, “Without those skilled workers coming from outside Canada, we absolutely cannot build the homes and meet the demand that exists currently today.”

But numerous critics have pointed out the logical fallacy with this argument.


As the TD Bank warned: “Continuing with a high-growth immigration strategy could widen the housing shortfall by about a half-million units within just two years. Recent government policies to accelerate construction are unlikely to offer a stop-gap due to the short time period and the natural lags in adjusting supply.”

The National Bank of Canada cautioned: “The federal government’s decision to open the immigration floodgates during the most aggressive monetary tightening cycle in a generation has created a record imbalance between housing and demand … As housing affordability pressures continue to mount across the country, we believe Ottawa should consider revising its immigration targets to allow supply to catch up with demand.”


BMO (Bank of Montreal) reported, “Heightened immigration flows designed to ease labour supply pressure immediately add to the housing demand they are trying to meet … The infrastructure in place and the industry’s ability to build clearly can’t support unchecked levels of demand, so the affordability conundrum continues.”

Deputy Bank of Canada governor Toni Gravelle noted in a recent speech, as reported by The Canadian Press, that, “this jump in demographic demand coupled with the existing structural supply issues could explain why rent inflation continues to climb in Canada. It also helps explain, in part, why housing prices have not fallen as much as we had expected.”

To be sure, Canada’s affordable housing shortage isn’t solely attributable to federal immigration policy – high interest rates are another factor along with the impact of provincial and municipal housing policies.

Long term, the Trudeau government argues, Canada needs high immigration levels to provide the workers of the future, due to low domestic birth rates.

But that said, and as the Trudeau government continues to announce new deals with municipalities to build more housing, remember their current high immigration polices are undermining those efforts.

lgoldstein@postmedia.com
And around & around & around we go!!
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Ottawa to accept 1,000 applications from Canadians’ relatives seeking way out of Gaza
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Laura Osman
Published Jan 02, 2024 • 3 minute read
Only 1,000 Palestinians with extended family ties to Canada will be able to apply to escape the Gaza Strip with Canada's help.
Only 1,000 Palestinians with extended family ties to Canada will be able to apply to escape the Gaza Strip with Canada's help.
OTTAWA — The National Council of Canadian Muslims is calling on the federal government to remove a cap on the number of Palestinians who can seek refuge with their Canadian extended family members from the violence in the Gaza Strip.


The special extended family program for people in Gaza is set to launch next week, after Palestinian Canadians pleaded for months to get help from the government to rescue their loved ones as the Israel-Hamas war continues.


The program would offer visas to a maximum of 1,000 Palestinians, which would allow them to take refuge in Canada for three years if their families are willing to financially support them during that time.

When Immigration Minister Marc Miller announced the plan last month, he said it wasn’t clear how many people would benefit, but that it would likely be “in the hundreds.”

A week later, the department released the written policy for the program.

It shows that Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada will close the program to new requests after it receives and begins processing the first 1,000 applications, or after a year has elapsed.


The council of Canadian Muslims, a national advocacy group, says it has already been in contact with more than a thousand people who have reached out about getting their families out of Gaza.

“There should not be a cap,” said Uthman Quick, the organization’s director of communications.

The cap “takes into consideration the volatility on the ground and the difficulty that Canada and like-minded countries are having in moving people from Gaza to Egypt,” Immigration Department spokesperson Matthew Krupovich said in a statement Tuesday.

Last month, Miller said it remains very difficult to secure safe passage out of the Palestinian territory, as Ottawa has no control over who can cross the tightly controlled Rafah border crossing between the Gaza Strip and Egypt on any given day. Even getting Canadian citizens out of the war zone has proven to be slow and difficult.


Toronto immigration lawyer Yameena Ansari said she believes the cap represents a huge underestimate of the number of people who need help.

Ansari advocated for the policy as part of an ad hoc group of immigration lawyers called the Gaza Family Reunification Project.

“Just between the lawyers in this group, we know more than 1,000 applicants,” said Ansari, who called the limit “heinous.”

Gaza has been under near constant bombardment since Hamas raided southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing an estimated 1,200 people in Israel and taking about 240 hostage.

Israel almost immediately launched a retaliatory attack in the Hamas-controlled territory that has seen more than 21,900 Palestinians killed, according to local authorities.


Two-thirds of the Palestinian casualties are women and children, Gaza’s Health Ministry says. Canadians with family in the region have described feeling terrified for loved ones who are running out of places to take shelter.

Ansari said she expects the number of applications will fill up quickly, creating what she called a “battle royale” for a scarce number of visas.

“What’s at stake is, and I want to put this really bluntly: is your family going to live or are they going to die?” Ansari said.

She said she took calls all through the holidays from frantic families hoping to prepare for the Jan. 9 launch of the program, and hoping their families will live long enough to get a visa.

Some of those conversations have been difficult, Ansari said. She has had to explain that not all family members will be able to leave. Families will have to decide whether to leave some loved ones behind.

That is, if they can even get through the border.

“This piece of paper might be meaningless. You might not be able to leave this conflict,” Ansari said.

That’s why the NCCM said they have called for a ceasefire to put an end to the violence.

Most people in Gaza don’t want to leave, Quick said, and they want to know that if they do flee to Canada for refuge that they have the right to return home when the conflict is over.

— With files from The Associated Press.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
113,712
12,931
113
Low Earth Orbit
Ottawa to accept 1,000 applications from Canadians’ relatives seeking way out of Gaza
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Laura Osman
Published Jan 02, 2024 • 3 minute read
Only 1,000 Palestinians with extended family ties to Canada will be able to apply to escape the Gaza Strip with Canada's help.
Only 1,000 Palestinians with extended family ties to Canada will be able to apply to escape the Gaza Strip with Canada's help.
OTTAWA — The National Council of Canadian Muslims is calling on the federal government to remove a cap on the number of Palestinians who can seek refuge with their Canadian extended family members from the violence in the Gaza Strip.


The special extended family program for people in Gaza is set to launch next week, after Palestinian Canadians pleaded for months to get help from the government to rescue their loved ones as the Israel-Hamas war continues.


The program would offer visas to a maximum of 1,000 Palestinians, which would allow them to take refuge in Canada for three years if their families are willing to financially support them during that time.

When Immigration Minister Marc Miller announced the plan last month, he said it wasn’t clear how many people would benefit, but that it would likely be “in the hundreds.”

A week later, the department released the written policy for the program.

It shows that Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada will close the program to new requests after it receives and begins processing the first 1,000 applications, or after a year has elapsed.


The council of Canadian Muslims, a national advocacy group, says it has already been in contact with more than a thousand people who have reached out about getting their families out of Gaza.

“There should not be a cap,” said Uthman Quick, the organization’s director of communications.

The cap “takes into consideration the volatility on the ground and the difficulty that Canada and like-minded countries are having in moving people from Gaza to Egypt,” Immigration Department spokesperson Matthew Krupovich said in a statement Tuesday.

Last month, Miller said it remains very difficult to secure safe passage out of the Palestinian territory, as Ottawa has no control over who can cross the tightly controlled Rafah border crossing between the Gaza Strip and Egypt on any given day. Even getting Canadian citizens out of the war zone has proven to be slow and difficult.


Toronto immigration lawyer Yameena Ansari said she believes the cap represents a huge underestimate of the number of people who need help.

Ansari advocated for the policy as part of an ad hoc group of immigration lawyers called the Gaza Family Reunification Project.

“Just between the lawyers in this group, we know more than 1,000 applicants,” said Ansari, who called the limit “heinous.”

Gaza has been under near constant bombardment since Hamas raided southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing an estimated 1,200 people in Israel and taking about 240 hostage.

Israel almost immediately launched a retaliatory attack in the Hamas-controlled territory that has seen more than 21,900 Palestinians killed, according to local authorities.


Two-thirds of the Palestinian casualties are women and children, Gaza’s Health Ministry says. Canadians with family in the region have described feeling terrified for loved ones who are running out of places to take shelter.

Ansari said she expects the number of applications will fill up quickly, creating what she called a “battle royale” for a scarce number of visas.

“What’s at stake is, and I want to put this really bluntly: is your family going to live or are they going to die?” Ansari said.

She said she took calls all through the holidays from frantic families hoping to prepare for the Jan. 9 launch of the program, and hoping their families will live long enough to get a visa.

Some of those conversations have been difficult, Ansari said. She has had to explain that not all family members will be able to leave. Families will have to decide whether to leave some loved ones behind.

That is, if they can even get through the border.

“This piece of paper might be meaningless. You might not be able to leave this conflict,” Ansari said.

That’s why the NCCM said they have called for a ceasefire to put an end to the violence.

Most people in Gaza don’t want to leave, Quick said, and they want to know that if they do flee to Canada for refuge that they have the right to return home when the conflict is over.

— With files from The Associated Press.
Sheds light on the rumors of the Civilian Aviation Reserve being activated....
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Canada can’t afford to block temporary residents, Desjardins says
Author of the article:Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Laura Dhillon Kane
Published Jan 10, 2024 • 2 minute read

Curbing the number of temporary workers and international students allowed into Canada would deepen an expected recession and blunt the country’s subsequent recovery, according to Desjardins Securities Inc.


Record numbers of newcomers have pushed Canada’s population growth rate to 3.2%, one of the fastest in the world. The surge has boosted the labour market but also helped drive up housing costs, sparking a backlash in the typically immigrant-friendly country.


Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has acknowledged a need to adjust policy to get a handle on the “massive expansion” in temporary residents.

While an outright ban on non-permanent residents isn’t being considered, Randall Bartlett, Desjardins’ senior director of Canadian economics, examined the impact of changes to immigration. If the influx of temporary residents were to grind to a halt, real gross domestic product would fall considerably below current forecasts, and a recession the firm anticipates in the first half of 2024 would double in length, he wrote in a report released Wednesday.


“Caution is warranted on the part of policymakers to minimize the economic downside of slowing newcomer arrivals too quickly,” Bartlett said. “But it’s not an easy balance to strike, as sustained high non-permanent resident admissions could further strain provincial finances and housing affordability.”

Canada accepted 454,590 new permanent residents over the 12-month period to Oct. 1, while bringing in a record 804,690 non-permanent residents. Temporary admissions should slow naturally with the economy, but changes in government policy may cause them to decline even faster, Bartlett said.

He used Desjardins’ recent economic and financial outlook as a baseline since it contains population-growth estimates that are roughly in line with the Bank of Canada’s most recent monetary policy report. The Desjardins forecast assumes there will be roughly half as many non-permanent residents in 2024 as there were last year, then half as many again in 2025, before hitting bottom in 2026 and starting to rise again after that.


Given those estimates, the Desjardins outlook predicts real GDP will grow just 0.1% in 2024 and an average of about 1.95% annually from 2025 through 2028.

But if Canada were to shut the door to temporary residents, real GDP would drop by 0.7% in 2024 and grow an average of 1.78% annually over the following four years, Bartlett said.

On the other hand, if Canada were to double the pace of non-permanent resident admissions, compared with the Desjardins forecast, the country would experience a milder economic slowdown than anticipated and potentially avoid a recession altogether. Real GDP would grow 1% in 2024, and top 2.1% on average after that, Bartlett said.

The Bank of Canada’s official forecast doesn’t see a recession on the horizon, though Governor Tiff Macklem said in an interview with BNN Bloomberg Television that the first part of 2024 is “not going to feel good.”

Boosting temporary-resident admissions would also likely contribute to elevated inflation, complicating the central bank’s job and probably keeping rates higher for longer than they would be otherwise, Bartlett said. Conversely, halting those arrivals would keep inflation more contained.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
More than 355,000 international students became permanent residents in 2021-23: Report
Feds also stepping up processing other permanent residency claims, according to Blacklock's Reporter

Author of the article:postmedia News
Published Jan 10, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 1 minute read

The Department of Immigration said more than 350,000 foreign students were allowed to remain in Canada as permanent residents over the last three years, according to Blacklock's Reporter.
The Department of Immigration said that more than a third of a million foreign students were allowed to remain in Canada as permanent residents over the last three years.


“In the past three years over 627,000 former temporary residents became permanent residents,” the department wrote to the House of Commons public accounts committee, according to Blacklock’s Reporter.


“This includes over 355,000 former international students.”



The figures covered the period from 2021 to 2023.

The department also said it’s stepping up processing the permanent residency claims of foreigners already in Canada after immigration fell during pandemic lockdowns.

In 2020, the number of new immigrants allowed into Canada was 184,370, less than half the current quota.


Cabinet’s Immigration Levels Plan sets quotas at 485,000 people this year and 500,000 in 2025, even though some Canadians said those numbers are too high.

According to in-house 2023 research by the Immigration Department, some questioned the feasibility of housing another half-million immigrants annually. “Gaps identified included more support finding housing,” said the report.

“We’re in this housing crisis,” said one respondent.

“The education system and health system are already under a great deal of stress,” said another.

“People are living on the street because there’s no housing,” said another respondent. “We need to get our own house in order before we welcome anybody else in.”

The Immigration Department paid Quorus Consulting Group $119,723 for the research done on 18 focus groups nationwide.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Government was warned two years ago high immigration could affect housing costs
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Nojoud Al Mallees
Published Jan 11, 2024 • Last updated 2 days ago • 4 minute read

OTTAWA — Federal public servants warned the government two years ago that large increases to immigration could affect housing affordability and services, internal documents show.


Documents obtained by The Canadian Press through an access-to-information request show Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada analyzed the potential effects immigration would have on the economy, housing and services, as it prepared its immigration targets for 2023 to 2025.


The deputy minister, among others, was warned in 2022 that housing construction had not kept up with the pace of population growth.

“In Canada, population growth has exceeded the growth in available housing units,” one slide deck reads.

“As the federal authority charged with managing immigration, IRCC policy-makers must understand the misalignment between population growth and housing supply, and how permanent and temporary immigration shapes population growth.”


Immigration accounts for nearly all population growth in Canada, given the country’s aging demographics.

The federal government ultimately decided to increase the number of permanent residents Canada welcomes each year to 500,000 in 2025, a decision that drew considerable attention and scrutiny. It means in 2025, Canada will welcome nearly twice as many permanent residents as it did in 2015.

The document reveals federal public servants were well aware of the pressures high population growth would have on housing and services.

“Rapid increases put pressure on health care and affordable housing,” public servants warned. “Settlement and resettlement service providers are expressing short-term strain due to labour market conditions, increased levels and the Afghanistan and Ukraine initiatives.”


Housing affordability has now become a political liability for the Liberal government. The Conservatives have gained considerable momentum over the last year as the party pounces on affordability issues, while avoiding the issue of immigration in particular. These pressures have forced the Liberal government to refocus its efforts on housing policy and begin to address the spike in international students with new rules.

Recent data shows Canada’s pace of population growth continues to set records as the country brings in a historic number of temporary residents as well, largely through international student and temporary foreign worker programs.

The country’s population grew by more than 430,000 during the third quarter of 2023, marking the fastest pace of population growth in any quarter since 1957.


Experts spanning from Bay Street to academic institutions have warned that Canada’s strong population growth is eroding housing affordability, as demand outpaces supply.

The Bank of Canada has offered similar analysis. Deputy governor Toni Gravelle delivered a speech in December warning that strong population growth is pushing rents and home prices upward.

Public opinion polls also show Canadians are increasingly concerned about the pressure immigration is putting on services, infrastructure and housing, leading to waning support for high immigration.

The Liberal government has defended its immigration policy decisions, arguing that immigrants help bring about economic prosperity and help with the country’s demographics as the population ages.


However, amid the heightened scrutiny of the Liberal government’s immigration policy, Immigration Minister Marc Miller levelled out the annual target at 500,000 permanent residents for 2026.

The documents from 2022 note that Canada’s immigration targets have exceeded the recommendations of some experts, including the Century Initiative, an organization that advocates for growing the country’s population to 100 million by the end of the century.

However, attention is now shifting from these targets to the steep rise in non-permanent residents. Between July and October, about three-quarters of Canada’s population growth came from temporary residents, including international students and temporary foreign workers.


That trend is raising alarms about the increase in businesses’ reliance on low-wage migrant workers and the luring of international student byshady post-secondary institutions.

Mikal Skuterud, an economics professor at the University of Waterloo who specializes in immigration policy, says the federal government appears to have “lost control” of temporary migration flows.

Unlike the annual targets for permanent residents, the number of temporary residents is dictated by demand for migrant workers and international students.

He also notes there is a link between the targets for permanent residents and the flow of temporary residents.

“To the extent that you increase permanent numbers, and migrants realize the way you get a PR is to come here as a temporary resident … then migrants are incentivized to kind of come and try their luck,” he said.


Skuterud, who has been a vocal critic of the federal government’s immigration policy, says the benefits of high immigration have been exaggerated by the Liberals.

He said that starting around 2015, when the Liberal government was first elected, a narrative developed in Canada that “immigration was kind of a solution to Canada’s economic growth problems.”

And while the professor says that narrative is one that people like to believe, he notes higher immigration does little when it comes to increasing living standards, as measured by real GDP per capita.

Public servants at IRCC are in agreement, the released documents suggest.

“Increasing the working age population can have a positive impact on gross domestic product, but little effect on GDP per capita,” public servants noted.
 

Taxslave2

House Member
Aug 13, 2022
3,785
2,248
113
Ottawa to accept 1,000 applications from Canadians’ relatives seeking way out of Gaza
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Laura Osman
Published Jan 02, 2024 • 3 minute read
Only 1,000 Palestinians with extended family ties to Canada will be able to apply to escape the Gaza Strip with Canada's help.
Only 1,000 Palestinians with extended family ties to Canada will be able to apply to escape the Gaza Strip with Canada's help.
OTTAWA — The National Council of Canadian Muslims is calling on the federal government to remove a cap on the number of Palestinians who can seek refuge with their Canadian extended family members from the violence in the Gaza Strip.


The special extended family program for people in Gaza is set to launch next week, after Palestinian Canadians pleaded for months to get help from the government to rescue their loved ones as the Israel-Hamas war continues.


The program would offer visas to a maximum of 1,000 Palestinians, which would allow them to take refuge in Canada for three years if their families are willing to financially support them during that time.

When Immigration Minister Marc Miller announced the plan last month, he said it wasn’t clear how many people would benefit, but that it would likely be “in the hundreds.”

A week later, the department released the written policy for the program.

It shows that Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada will close the program to new requests after it receives and begins processing the first 1,000 applications, or after a year has elapsed.


The council of Canadian Muslims, a national advocacy group, says it has already been in contact with more than a thousand people who have reached out about getting their families out of Gaza.

“There should not be a cap,” said Uthman Quick, the organization’s director of communications.

The cap “takes into consideration the volatility on the ground and the difficulty that Canada and like-minded countries are having in moving people from Gaza to Egypt,” Immigration Department spokesperson Matthew Krupovich said in a statement Tuesday.

Last month, Miller said it remains very difficult to secure safe passage out of the Palestinian territory, as Ottawa has no control over who can cross the tightly controlled Rafah border crossing between the Gaza Strip and Egypt on any given day. Even getting Canadian citizens out of the war zone has proven to be slow and difficult.


Toronto immigration lawyer Yameena Ansari said she believes the cap represents a huge underestimate of the number of people who need help.

Ansari advocated for the policy as part of an ad hoc group of immigration lawyers called the Gaza Family Reunification Project.

“Just between the lawyers in this group, we know more than 1,000 applicants,” said Ansari, who called the limit “heinous.”

Gaza has been under near constant bombardment since Hamas raided southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing an estimated 1,200 people in Israel and taking about 240 hostage.

Israel almost immediately launched a retaliatory attack in the Hamas-controlled territory that has seen more than 21,900 Palestinians killed, according to local authorities.


Two-thirds of the Palestinian casualties are women and children, Gaza’s Health Ministry says. Canadians with family in the region have described feeling terrified for loved ones who are running out of places to take shelter.

Ansari said she expects the number of applications will fill up quickly, creating what she called a “battle royale” for a scarce number of visas.

“What’s at stake is, and I want to put this really bluntly: is your family going to live or are they going to die?” Ansari said.

She said she took calls all through the holidays from frantic families hoping to prepare for the Jan. 9 launch of the program, and hoping their families will live long enough to get a visa.

Some of those conversations have been difficult, Ansari said. She has had to explain that not all family members will be able to leave. Families will have to decide whether to leave some loved ones behind.

That is, if they can even get through the border.

“This piece of paper might be meaningless. You might not be able to leave this conflict,” Ansari said.

That’s why the NCCM said they have called for a ceasefire to put an end to the violence.

Most people in Gaza don’t want to leave, Quick said, and they want to know that if they do flee to Canada for refuge that they have the right to return home when the conflict is over.

— With files from The Associated Press.
Should be some Arab country take them as refugees. We are not the world garbage dump.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 55Mercury

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
27,846
7,613
113
B.C.
Government was warned two years ago high immigration could affect housing costs
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Nojoud Al Mallees
Published Jan 11, 2024 • Last updated 2 days ago • 4 minute read

OTTAWA — Federal public servants warned the government two years ago that large increases to immigration could affect housing affordability and services, internal documents show.


Documents obtained by The Canadian Press through an access-to-information request show Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada analyzed the potential effects immigration would have on the economy, housing and services, as it prepared its immigration targets for 2023 to 2025.


The deputy minister, among others, was warned in 2022 that housing construction had not kept up with the pace of population growth.

“In Canada, population growth has exceeded the growth in available housing units,” one slide deck reads.

“As the federal authority charged with managing immigration, IRCC policy-makers must understand the misalignment between population growth and housing supply, and how permanent and temporary immigration shapes population growth.”


Immigration accounts for nearly all population growth in Canada, given the country’s aging demographics.

The federal government ultimately decided to increase the number of permanent residents Canada welcomes each year to 500,000 in 2025, a decision that drew considerable attention and scrutiny. It means in 2025, Canada will welcome nearly twice as many permanent residents as it did in 2015.

The document reveals federal public servants were well aware of the pressures high population growth would have on housing and services.

“Rapid increases put pressure on health care and affordable housing,” public servants warned. “Settlement and resettlement service providers are expressing short-term strain due to labour market conditions, increased levels and the Afghanistan and Ukraine initiatives.”


Housing affordability has now become a political liability for the Liberal government. The Conservatives have gained considerable momentum over the last year as the party pounces on affordability issues, while avoiding the issue of immigration in particular. These pressures have forced the Liberal government to refocus its efforts on housing policy and begin to address the spike in international students with new rules.

Recent data shows Canada’s pace of population growth continues to set records as the country brings in a historic number of temporary residents as well, largely through international student and temporary foreign worker programs.

The country’s population grew by more than 430,000 during the third quarter of 2023, marking the fastest pace of population growth in any quarter since 1957.


Experts spanning from Bay Street to academic institutions have warned that Canada’s strong population growth is eroding housing affordability, as demand outpaces supply.

The Bank of Canada has offered similar analysis. Deputy governor Toni Gravelle delivered a speech in December warning that strong population growth is pushing rents and home prices upward.

Public opinion polls also show Canadians are increasingly concerned about the pressure immigration is putting on services, infrastructure and housing, leading to waning support for high immigration.

The Liberal government has defended its immigration policy decisions, arguing that immigrants help bring about economic prosperity and help with the country’s demographics as the population ages.


However, amid the heightened scrutiny of the Liberal government’s immigration policy, Immigration Minister Marc Miller levelled out the annual target at 500,000 permanent residents for 2026.

The documents from 2022 note that Canada’s immigration targets have exceeded the recommendations of some experts, including the Century Initiative, an organization that advocates for growing the country’s population to 100 million by the end of the century.

However, attention is now shifting from these targets to the steep rise in non-permanent residents. Between July and October, about three-quarters of Canada’s population growth came from temporary residents, including international students and temporary foreign workers.


That trend is raising alarms about the increase in businesses’ reliance on low-wage migrant workers and the luring of international student byshady post-secondary institutions.

Mikal Skuterud, an economics professor at the University of Waterloo who specializes in immigration policy, says the federal government appears to have “lost control” of temporary migration flows.

Unlike the annual targets for permanent residents, the number of temporary residents is dictated by demand for migrant workers and international students.

He also notes there is a link between the targets for permanent residents and the flow of temporary residents.

“To the extent that you increase permanent numbers, and migrants realize the way you get a PR is to come here as a temporary resident … then migrants are incentivized to kind of come and try their luck,” he said.


Skuterud, who has been a vocal critic of the federal government’s immigration policy, says the benefits of high immigration have been exaggerated by the Liberals.

He said that starting around 2015, when the Liberal government was first elected, a narrative developed in Canada that “immigration was kind of a solution to Canada’s economic growth problems.”

And while the professor says that narrative is one that people like to believe, he notes higher immigration does little when it comes to increasing living standards, as measured by real GDP per capita.

Public servants at IRCC are in agreement, the released documents suggest.

“Increasing the working age population can have a positive impact on gross domestic product, but little effect on GDP per capita,” public servants noted.
File that one under , No shit Sherlock .
 
  • Like
Reactions: Taxslave2

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Trudeau ignored warnings on immigration, now you pay the price
Government was warned in 2022 that high immigration numbers were putting a squeeze on housing and heath system.


Author of the article:Brian Lilley
Published Jan 13, 2024 • 3 minute read

The Trudeau government was warned that their rapid push for higher and higher immigration numbers was having a negative impact on housing and health care across the country. A presentation to the government in 2022 warned of the problems but rather than rethinking or adjusting their policy they pushed ahead.


Now the man who was in charge of immigration when the warning was issued and is now in charge of housing, is defending what happened. Sean Fraser issued a joint statement Friday with current immigration minister Marc Miller after The Canadian Press reported on the presentation that they obtained under access to information legislation.


“Had we not increased immigration post-pandemic, the economy would have shrunk. Businesses facing an acute labour shortage would have closed. The social services Canadians needed, including in health care, would be further delayed or even more difficult to access,” the two ministers said.

It’s a typical response, we had to do it, Canada needs immigrants. To a degree, that’s true. There is a shortage of workers in many areas and industries and natural population growth is stagnant.


That said, the numbers the Liberals have been admitting, in particular temporary residents, mostly in the student sector, are not sustainable. Our population grew by one million people between Jan. 1 and Oct. 1, according to Statistics Canada’s quarterly population estimate.

When StatsCan released the October number three weeks ago, the population had already grown from 40,528,396 to 40,720,342. According to StatsCan’s real time population clock, we’ve added another 67,000 people in the last three weeks.

This is the unsustainable level bureaucrats were warning the government about in 2022.

“In Canada, population growth has exceeded the growth in available housing units,” one of the documents obtained by CP stated.


“As the federal authority charged with managing immigration, IRCC (Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada) policy-makers must understand the misalignment between population growth and housing supply, and how permanent and temporary immigration shapes population growth.”

Over the past several months, StatsCan has been warning the government in their monthly jobs report that population growth was outstripping job creation.

None of that seems to matter to the Trudeau Liberals.

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland was asked twice about the CP report last week and offered platitudes about the benefits of immigration. Few are arguing that immigration isn’t a benefit, but many are now questioning the historically high numbers.


CP reporter Nojoud Al Mallees, who wrote the original story, asked Freeland if tempering demand for housing by lowering immigration numbers was part of the solution.

“I think it’s important for us as Canadians to recognize the really positive role that immigration plays for our country,” Freeland said.

The closest she came to admitting that there was any problem was when she blamed post-secondary institutions for taking in close to 900,000 students this year without proper housing for them. These schools aren’t home builders, and they aren’t in charge of who gets admitted to the country. That would be the federal government, currently controlled by the Trudeau Liberals.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said the problem with the Liberal plan is that it doesn’t take the impact of the influx into account.


“Obviously, you need to build homes if you are going to bring in people,” Poilievre said noting that last year fewer homes were built across Canada than in 1972 when the population was just about half of what it is today.

“Common sense Conservatives will get back to an approach of immigration that invites a number of people that we can house, employ and care for in our health care system,” Poilievre said.

That sounds like a better policy than the one Trudeau continues to push despite the harm it is causing. Is it any wonder that Poilievre and the Conservatives are leading in the polls?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Taxslave2

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Canada considers taking in refugees from Gaza as Egypt says no
Egypt cites security concerns is saying no to refugees from Gaza, why is Canada so cavalier?


Author of the article:Brian Lilley
Published Jan 15, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read
Countries in the Middle East are saying no to refugees from Gaza, why is Canada saying yes?

Egypt doesn’t want to take in an influx of Palestinian refugees, fearing a security threat. Canada, on the other hand, seems sure that we can handle a situation that countries in the region are shying away from.


The issue of Palestinian refugees is a complex one, and there is more than one reason that countries such as Egypt and Jordan have refused to take in refugees. That includes publicly stated claims that they don’t want to aid Israel in pushing Palestinians off their land, but security is also a factor.


Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi has said that he worries an influx of Palestinian refugees to the Sinai Peninsula would create “a base for attacks on Israel. Israel would have the right to defend itself … and would strike Egyptian territory.”

That’s something Riccardo Fabiani, North Africa project director with the International Crisis Group, agreed with, noting Egypt dealt with an insurgency — now mostly quelled — sporadically on the Sinai Peninsula, starting in 2011.


“Cairo does not want to have a new security problem on its hands in this problematic region,” Fabiani told Associated Press in October.

And what would that security threat be?

A poll taken in December and reported on by Reuters showed that 72% of Palestinians said they “believed the Hamas decision to launch the cross-border rampage in southern Israel was ‘correct’ given its outcome so far, while 22% said it was ‘incorrect.’”

Almost three-quarters of Palestinians agreed with attacking innocent civilians, raping women, killing old people in their homes, and thought that taking the young and old, and men and women as hostages was acceptable. This is the population that the Trudeau government believes we can bring into our country out of a humanitarian concern.


Concern over the humanitarian situation in Gaza is understandable, but importing a population that is at odds with Canadian values is not. All the polling of the population in Gaza, by Palestinians themselves, shows that they are not in line with Canadian values.

This is not a population fleeing war, this is a population cheering on war — a population totally radicalized by decades of propaganda, some of it funded by Canada through UNRWA schools.

Some comparisons have been made to the Ukrainian situation, with Palestinian supporters implying racism is at play because of security concerns and vetting. That’s simply not the case; in Ukraine, we are dealing with a population that is trying to repel an invading Russian army as that country tries to establish a Western-style liberal democracy.


This isn’t even like the Syrian refugee crisis, which Canada stepped up to assist with.

In that instance, there was a population fleeing war and fleeing extremists, they weren’t cheering on ISIS or Asad — they simply wanted to live.

That’s not the case here. After decades of radicalization and 15 years of Hamas control of Gaza, much of the population thinks like the terrorists running the place. Bringing in that population to Canada will be problematic.

Justin Trudeau likes to say that diversity is our strength, but this might be stretching it a little too far.

We already have people in Canada expressing outright support for terrorist groups, with the regulars marching in the streets. We don’t need to import people whose values are at odds with our own.

Canada needs to find a way to help with the humanitarian crisis without importing a new crisis into this country.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Lawyers raise concerns over screening of Gaza visa applicants
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Laura Osman
Published Jan 15, 2024 • 4 minute read

OTTAWA — The security screening the federal government has brought in for people applying to flee the Gaza Strip is facing criticism from both lawyers who feel its questions are too invasive and others who think it should dig even deeper.


A special program that would allow up to 1,000 people in Gaza with relatives in Canada to apply for visas opened for applications last week, with the federal government seeking an extraordinary level of detail.


People are being asked to supply their social media accounts, details about scars and other marks on their bodies, information on everyone they are related to — including through marriage — and every passport they have ever had.

The questions are creating anxiety for families who worry their loved ones might have trouble answering after three months largely without internet access, electricity, or even adequate food or drinking water, said Calgary immigration lawyer Yameena Ansari. She lobbied for the program as a member of the Gaza Family Reunification Project.


“It’s almost impossible to get these answers when you’re talking about people that are running away from their homes,” she said in an interview.

The questions are also extremely painful because they suggest that families desperate to flee the violence in Gaza are suspected terrorists, she said.

“This is not a list that we would ask somebody who was coming to Canada on a humanitarian basis,” Ansari said.

“To me, these are the questions I would ask somebody if I thought that they were terrorists or a combatant.”

Meanwhile, Lawyers for Secure Immigration, a group that formed at the outset of the latest Israel-Hamas war, urged the government in a letter last week to ask more pointed questions related to Hamas and terrorist activities to ensure none of the armed militant group’s supporters are allowed into Canada.


Richard Kurland, a Vancouver-based immigration lawyer and member of the newly formed group, called the background questions “grossly insufficient” because they don’t probe for possible connections with Hamas and the events of Oct. 7.

Kurland said he understands it’s important for Palestinian Canadians to get their family to Canada safely, but said it’s not something that can be done “blindly.”

Once a bad actor gets into Canada, it is a very long and difficult process to remove them, he said.

This past weekend marked the 100th day of the war, which broke out on Oct. 7 when Hamas launched a surprise attack on southern Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking 240 others as hostages.

The military response from Israel was almost immediate as it lay siege to the territory, restricting access to clean water, food, internet and electricity, and subjecting the strip to a near-constant barrage of bombs in its pursuit of Hamas.


The humanitarian catastrophe has displaced most of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million people. The Health Ministry in the Hamas-run territory says 23,000 Palestinians have been killed, though it does not differentiate between civilians and combatants.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada said Palestinians are not considered a greater threat to Canada’s security than people from elsewhere in the world, but the “enhanced biographic information” is part of a standard practice in cases where IRCC is not able to do initial screening on the ground.

The background questions are similar to the ones asked of Afghans who were still in Afghanistan when they applied to come to Canada after the fall of Kabul in 2021, the department said.


“As we did with Afghanistan, we will collect enhanced biographic information and conduct security screening while the applicant is still in Gaza. Provided no inadmissibility concerns are flagged, people who are able to leave Gaza will have their biometrics collected in a third country,” the Immigration Department said in a statement.

Shortly after the Gaza family reunification program was first announced, Liberal Mental Health Minister Ya’ara Saks said members of the Israeli community in Canada had expressed concerns about the program.

The conflict in Gaza has coincided with a massive rise in antisemitism across Canada, and police have reported an increase in hate crimes directed at the Jewish community.


“This is a limited program, the security concerns are well understood and the security requirements are strict and follow reviews from Israeli authorities,” Saks assured her constituents in an Instagram post on Dec. 22, the day after the immigration program was first announced.

“I understand the concerns I’ve heard from community members. Security is always the number one priority and we will be vigilant.”

Saks declined to elaborate on her comments when contacted by The Canadian Press last week.

The background questions are only the first of a multi-step screening process.

If no concerns are flagged, basic personal details like name, date of birth, sex, and passport information of the applicant will be passed on to Israeli and Egyptian governments, which will do their own vetting and determine whether or not the individual can leave Gaza. After that, applicants will still have to undergo fingerprinting and other biometrics before they can board a plane to Canada.


The Immigration Department has promised to be flexible if applicants don’t have access to all the background information that has been asked of them, but Jewish Toronto immigration lawyer Debbie Rachlis said that flexibility is not enshrined in the policy.

“That’s not written down anywhere and to me it’s not worth anything,” said Rachlis, who is also a member of the Gaza Family Reunification Project.

The penalties for putting incomplete or inaccurate information in the application can be significant, she said, including getting banned from Canada for up to five years.

Rachlis said she wouldn’t be able to answer some of the questions about herself, especially without written records. She said there is no real recourse for people who get refused because they can’t remember details, like all of their past work supervisors’ names.

The government is still accepting applications, and hasn’t given any estimate of when visas could be issued. The department said the application process could take longer than it otherwise would if IRCC has to wait for additional information to complete background checks.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,705
3,320
113
Immigration Department says 144 Gazans on track to come to Canada, pending biometrics
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Jan 17, 2024 • 1 minute read

Ottawa has so far received 144 completed visa applications from people in the Gaza Strip who wish to be reunited with extended family members in Canada.


Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada opened a program to offer temporary visas to people in the besieged Palestinian territory, if their relatives can support them in Canada.


The department’s policy says it will only look at 1,000 applications, though Immigration Minister Marc Miller has said the department may be flexible.

A spokesperson in Miller’s official initially told The Canadian Press that 144 people in Gaza were on track to receive the visa as of Tuesday, as long as they can make it across the border for biometric screening and final approval.

The department later clarified that the process of combing through the contents of the completed applications was just beginning.

The Immigration Department opened the multi-step application process on Jan. 9, but hasn’t yet said how many initial applications it has received so far.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
113,712
12,931
113
Low Earth Orbit
Immigration Department says 144 Gazans on track to come to Canada, pending biometrics
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Jan 17, 2024 • 1 minute read

Ottawa has so far received 144 completed visa applications from people in the Gaza Strip who wish to be reunited with extended family members in Canada.


Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada opened a program to offer temporary visas to people in the besieged Palestinian territory, if their relatives can support them in Canada.


The department’s policy says it will only look at 1,000 applications, though Immigration Minister Marc Miller has said the department may be flexible.

A spokesperson in Miller’s official initially told The Canadian Press that 144 people in Gaza were on track to receive the visa as of Tuesday, as long as they can make it across the border for biometric screening and final approval.

The department later clarified that the process of combing through the contents of the completed applications was just beginning.

The Immigration Department opened the multi-step application process on Jan. 9, but hasn’t yet said how many initial applications it has received so far.
What sort of Passport do they carry?