Refugee/Migrant Crisis

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Asylum seeker grabs 5-year-old boy and jumps in front of train in Germany
Associated Press
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Published:
April 13, 2018
Updated:
April 13, 2018 1:52 PM EDT
In this file photo, a regional train leaves the Frankfurt-Hoechst railway station in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany, on April 13, 2018.ARNE DEDERT / AFP/Getty Images
BERLIN — Police say a man snatched a 5-year-old boy from his family and jumped in front of an approaching train with him at a station in western Germany. The child escaped with light injuries and the assailant was unhurt.
Authorities said the 23-year-old suspect, who arrived from India as an asylum-seeker several years ago and had a previous police record, was silent about his motives in Thursday’s incident in Wuppertal. A judge decided Friday to send him to a psychiatric hospital.
The boy was waiting at the station with his parents and two younger siblings when the assailant grabbed him and jumped in front of an approaching train. The driver was unable to stop in time, but the two weren’t seriously hurt because they ended up lying lengthwise under the train.
Asylum seeker grabs boy, 5, jumps in front of train in Germany | Toronto Sun
 

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Quebec asks federal government for help as 2018 asylum crossings spike beyond record-setting 2017
Canadian Press
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Published:
April 16, 2018
Updated:
April 16, 2018 3:14 PM EDT
An RCMP officer moves a barricade as they wait for the arrival of asylum seekers crossing the border into Canada from the United States at a police checkpoint close to the Canada-U.S. border near Hemmingford, Que., on Thursday, August 3, 2017.Paul Chiasson / THE CANADIAN PRESS
MONTREAL — The Quebec government says it is facing the prospect of even more asylum seekers entering the province from the United States this year and wants the federal government to come up with a plan to deal with the influx.
The number so far this year has tripled to 6,074 from about 2,000 during the same period in 2017 and is forecast to increase significantly this summer, Immigration Minister David Heurtel said Monday.
“Even the numbers we’re getting from the federal government show us that the situation is different, there’s going to be more asylum seekers, so we need a new plan,” he said.
Heurtel said projections suggest there will be up to 400 crossings a day this summer, compared to 250 in 2017.
He noted that the ball is in Ottawa’s court and that he will meet with federal officials Wednesday to discuss the matter.
The province said in addition to front-line services, there are other costs like health care and education that are stretched thin.
“This is not about money, this is about saying that Quebec can do its part, but our resources are completely saturated and we can’t do more,” Heurtel said.
A long line of asylum seekers wait to illegally cross the Canada/US border near Champlain, New York on August 6, 2017. GEOFF ROBINS/AFP/Getty Images
Quebec is maintaining its request for additional funds to cover $146 million in unprecedented expenses from last year irregular border crossers, with this year’s price tag yet to come.
Heurtel noted 25,000 asylum seekers entered Quebec through legal and illegal means in 2017, accounting for 50% of all asylum cases in Canada.
Several senior Quebec ministers joined Heurtel to announce the province has only 1,850 spots for asylum seekers in Montreal and that more than 70% of the places are already occupied.
When that number hits 85%, Quebec will no longer place any illegal crossers in any of the four temporary shelters in the city in order to leave room for people who enter the province by regular means.
Quebec ministers Lucie Charlebois, David Heurtel, Jean-Marc Fournier and Sebastien Proulx, left to right, discuss the situation involving asylum seekers during a news conference, Monday, April 16, 2018 in Montreal. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson
Heurtel said asylum seekers this year are coming from various countries and, based on anecdotal evidence, there seems to be an organized system where people land in the United States and immediately head for a popular irregular crossing at Roxham Road along the Quebec-New York border.
Many don’t have any interest in staying in Quebec for a long time.
“We’ve had certain days when we’ve had people come to our centres and sometimes upwards of 40% say were saying their intent was to go elsewhere in Canada,” Heurtel said.
“If an asylum seeker already (says) from the beginning that his final destination is somewhere else in Canada, maybe the federal government should take notice of that and act on it.”
People hold up signs in support of asylum seekers during a rally outside the Olympic Stadium in Montreal, Sunday, August 6, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes
Last year, the influx of border crossers was linked to the end of a U.S. government program that granted Haitians so-called “temporary protected status” following the massive earthquake that struck their homeland in 2010.
Jean-Nicolas Beuze, UN Refugee Agency representative in Canada, said 20,000 of the 50,000 who entered Canada last year crossed by irregular means — the vast majority of them in Quebec.
Meanwhile, 30,000 entered with a proper visa at the border or airport.
View Government of Canada asylum claim figures here.
Speaking to reporters in Ottawa, Beuze noted that two-thirds of asylum seekers are recognized as refugees.
“Not even one per cent of the people arriving through irregular means in Canada were detained by police on suspicion of criminal activity, which really shows we were facing a situation where people were genuinely coming to Canada to look for a solution to their plight,” he said.
“Even if people come in increased numbers over the summer, we are very much confident that with the additional funding, the measures that have been taken over the last nine to 10 months by the authorities at the border, at the immigration offices, Canada is very well equipped to respond.”
http://canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/refugees/asylum-claims.html
Quebec asks feds for help as 2018 asylum crossings spike | Toronto Sun
 

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Montreal man who alleges torture in Sudan heading to court after settlement talks abruptly end
Canadian Press
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Published:
April 17, 2018
Updated:
April 17, 2018 4:17 PM EDT
Abousfian Abdelrazik comments on the U.N. decision to remove his name from a terrorism blacklist during a news conference Dec. 1, 2011 in Montreal. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press/Files)THE CANADIAN PRESS
OTTAWA — A Montreal man’s lawsuit over his detention and alleged torture in Sudan is heading to a Federal Court hearing in September following the abrupt cancellation of settlement talks.
The federal government recently nixed the planned mediation sessions in the case of Abousfian Abdelrazik just before they were to begin, said lawyer Paul Champ, who has fought on behalf of his client for years.
Champ accused the government Tuesday of shelving the prospect of a resolution with Abdelrazik over “political blowback” from a multimillion-dollar settlement in a lawsuit filed by Toronto-born Omar Khadr.
Abdelrazik, 56, came from Africa as a refugee in 1990 and attained Canadian citizenship five years later. He was arrested, but not charged, during a 2003 visit to see his ailing mother in Sudan.
While in Sudanese custody, he was interrogated by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service about suspected extremist links.
Abdelrazik claims he was tortured by Sudanese intelligence officials during two periods of detention, but Canada says it knew nothing of the alleged abuse.
He denies involvement in terrorism and seeks financial compensation and an apology from the federal government for his prolonged ordeal in Sudan.
Champ said Tuesday that he and Abdelrazik had been hopeful the Liberal government would resolve the matter, but eight weeks have now been set aside for a Federal Court hearing to begin Sept. 14.
“It’s been a long road to justice and he is looking forward to a trial so he can finally face the Canadian officials who sat behind their little desks in Ottawa and destroyed his life,” Champ said.
Scott Bardsley, a spokesman for Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, said the government does not comment on settlement negotiations or ongoing court matters.
Days after his second release from prison, in July 2006, Abdelrazik’s name turned up on a United Nations Security Council blacklist that prevented him from flying back to Canada.
He was granted haven in the Canadian consulate in Khartoum, but Canada refused to issue him a travel document to fly home. Amid intense publicity about his case, he returned to Montreal in June 2009.
That same month, the Federal Court concluded CSIS was complicit in Abdelrazik’s 2003 detention.
Abdelrazik’s name was removed from the UN list in late 2011.
Last year the Liberal government paid a total of $31.25 million to close the book on long-standing lawsuits filed by Abdullah Almalki, Ahmad El Maati and Muayyed Nureddin over the federal role in their torture in Syria.
The government also apologized to Khadr, a former inmate at the U.S. prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and settled his lawsuit with a payout of $10.5 million.
Champ said that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s comments about justice and the sanctity of charter rights after the Khadr settlement were heartening, “but I guess the political blowback was too much and now politics has overruled justice and fairness.”
“There is no legal, moral or principled reason to deny Mr Abdelrazik compensation along the same lines as the other cases of Canadians tortured abroad.”
In a recent letter, Amnesty International Canada urged Trudeau to begin good-faith negotiations towards “adequate and appropriate compensation.”
“It is time for you to become involved and for you to take the principled decision that is so evidently required.”
Montreal man who alleges torture in Sudan heading to court after settlement talks abruptly end | Toronto Sun
 

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'Complete ignorance': Quebec Premier Couillard blasts Liberals over asylum response
Canadian Press
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Published:
April 18, 2018
Updated:
April 18, 2018 4:39 PM EDT
This file photo taken on August 5, 2017 shows a girl who crossed the Canada/US border illegally with her family, claiming refugee status in Canada,as she looks through a fence at a temporary detention centre in Blackpool, Quebec.GEOFF ROBINS / AFP/Getty Images
QUEBEC — Ottawa’s response to the refugee crisis is not acceptable and demonstrates complete ignorance of the realities on the ground, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard said Wednesday.
Couillard’s comments come as the province witnesses a surge of asylum seekers from the United States that is already three times as high this year as in the same period in 2017.
Quebec has asked for Ottawa for a plan on how to manage the influx of people and has requested additional funds to cover the $146 million in unprecedented expenses the province paid in 2017, when the crisis began.
People hold up signs in support of asylum seekers during a rally outside the Olympic Stadium in Montreal, Sunday, August 6, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes
In a written response to the Quebec government, federal Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen seemed to chastise the province for its current handling of asylum seekers.
“While last summer, Quebec was operating 13 temporary shelters to welcome asylum seekers, I have noticed that only four are currently available,” he said in his letter, a copy of which was obtained by The Canadian Press.
Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Ahmed Hussen rises during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, April 18, 2018. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang
“This risks creating delays at the border and triggering an unacceptable humanitarian situation. We need to avoid causing undue suffering to families who are seeking protection.”
Couillard said Hussen’s response was “not acceptable” and demonstrates “a complete ignorance of the realities on the ground, what Quebec went through last year and, quite certainly, what we will go through this year according to the projections.”
Asylum seekers sit in front of their tent in a temporary camp, Tuesday, August 15, 2017 near Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson
In 2017, Quebec received roughly 25,000 asylum seekers in 2017, representing half of the total in Canada.
So far this year 6,074 people have entered the province from the United States — triple the number of people compared with the same period last year.
Quebec ministers Lucie Charlebois, David Heurtel, Jean-Marc Fournier and Sebastien Proulx, left to right, discuss the situation involving asylum seekers during a news conference, Monday, April 16, 2018 in Montreal. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson
Quebec Immigration Minister David Heurtel was scheduled to hold talks on the issue with the federal government in Ottawa on Wednesday.
Hussen added in his letter his government has already reduced wait times in giving asylum seekers work permits and that the federal government pays for their health care.
Quebec asks federal government for help as 2018 asylum crossings spike beyond record-setting 2017
Opposition politicians in Quebec are hitting Couillard’s government hard on the file, accusing the premier of waiting until the issue became a full-blown crisis before taking decisive action.
‘Complete ignorance’: Couillard blasts Liberal asylum response | Toronto Sun
 

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'Complete ignorance': Quebec Premier Couillard blasts Liberals over asylum response
Canadian Press
More from Canadian Press
Published:
April 18, 2018
Updated:
April 18, 2018 4:39 PM EDT
This file photo taken on August 5, 2017 shows a girl who crossed the Canada/US border illegally with her family, claiming refugee status in Canada,as she looks through a fence at a temporary detention centre in Blackpool, Quebec.GEOFF ROBINS / AFP/Getty Images
QUEBEC — Ottawa’s response to the refugee crisis is not acceptable and demonstrates complete ignorance of the realities on the ground, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard said Wednesday.
Couillard’s comments come as the province witnesses a surge of asylum seekers from the United States that is already three times as high this year as in the same period in 2017.
Quebec has asked for Ottawa for a plan on how to manage the influx of people and has requested additional funds to cover the $146 million in unprecedented expenses the province paid in 2017, when the crisis began.
People hold up signs in support of asylum seekers during a rally outside the Olympic Stadium in Montreal, Sunday, August 6, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes
In a written response to the Quebec government, federal Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen seemed to chastise the province for its current handling of asylum seekers.
“While last summer, Quebec was operating 13 temporary shelters to welcome asylum seekers, I have noticed that only four are currently available,” he said in his letter, a copy of which was obtained by The Canadian Press.
Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Ahmed Hussen rises during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, April 18, 2018. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang
“This risks creating delays at the border and triggering an unacceptable humanitarian situation. We need to avoid causing undue suffering to families who are seeking protection.”
Couillard said Hussen’s response was “not acceptable” and demonstrates “a complete ignorance of the realities on the ground, what Quebec went through last year and, quite certainly, what we will go through this year according to the projections.”
Asylum seekers sit in front of their tent in a temporary camp, Tuesday, August 15, 2017 near Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson
In 2017, Quebec received roughly 25,000 asylum seekers in 2017, representing half of the total in Canada.
So far this year 6,074 people have entered the province from the United States — triple the number of people compared with the same period last year.
Quebec ministers Lucie Charlebois, David Heurtel, Jean-Marc Fournier and Sebastien Proulx, left to right, discuss the situation involving asylum seekers during a news conference, Monday, April 16, 2018 in Montreal. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson
Quebec Immigration Minister David Heurtel was scheduled to hold talks on the issue with the federal government in Ottawa on Wednesday.
Hussen added in his letter his government has already reduced wait times in giving asylum seekers work permits and that the federal government pays for their health care.
Quebec asks federal government for help as 2018 asylum crossings spike beyond record-setting 2017
Opposition politicians in Quebec are hitting Couillard’s government hard on the file, accusing the premier of waiting until the issue became a full-blown crisis before taking decisive action.
‘Complete ignorance’: Couillard blasts Liberal asylum response | Toronto Sun
Sounds like a deluge tome .
 

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MP Michelle Rempel wants entire Canadian border designated official port of entry
Canadian Press
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Published:
April 19, 2018
Updated:
April 19, 2018 3:48 PM EDT
Conservative MP Michelle Rempel stands during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on March 27, 2018. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)
OTTAWA — Conservative immigration critic Michelle Rempel wants to see the entire Canada-U.S. border designated as an official port of entry to help stop the flow of illegal migrants.
Concerns have boiled over in Quebec this week over the challenges posed by the thousands of asylum seekers crossing the border at unofficial entry points in Quebec and Ontario.
Some officials are projecting up to 400 people a day could cross the border into Quebec through forest paths this summer to claim asylum in Canada — a situation Rempel is calling a crisis.
Rempel wants the federal government to make the entire border as an official border crossing, closing a loophole in the so-called “safe third country” agreement that encourages would-be refugees in the U.S. from claiming asylum in Canada.
The Liberal government says it is working to ease pressures caused by the surge in asylum claims, including $74 million earmarked to help reduce extensive backlogs in refugee claims processing.
But Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board is warning concentrated surges in refugee claims and appeals could negate any gains it makes in reducing backlogs — last year, a 20 per cent improvement in processing was swallowed by a 40 per cent increase in cases.
Quebec asks federal government for help as 2018 asylum crossings spike
Bracing for another spike in illegal border crossings
MP Michelle Rempel wants entire Canadian border designated official port of entry | Toronto Sun
 

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Bashir Makhtal, imprisoned in Ethiopia for 11 years, back in Canada
Canadian Press
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Published:
April 21, 2018
Updated:
April 21, 2018 4:35 PM EDT
Handout photo of Bashir Makhtal, Canadian citizen held in Ethiopian jail since January, 2007. An Ethiopian court upheld the life sentence Friday of a Canadian man imprisoned on terrorism charges. Handout photo. Can be used with Jorge Barrera (Canwest News Service).
TORONTO — Amnesty International says a Canadian man who was held in an Ethiopian prison for more than 11 years has arrived in Toronto after being released earlier in the week.
Bashir Makhtal was sentenced to life in prison on terrorism-related charges in 2009 following a trial that was denounced by Amnesty International as “unfair” and “a political exercise.”
Demonstration for Canadian businessman Bashir Makhtal, who was sentenced two weeks ago to life in prison by an Ethiopian court on terrorism charges. The demonstration was held on Slater St. in Ottawa, August 17, 2009.
The aid organization says Makhtal is one of thousands released from Ethiopian prisons in recent months amid a shifting political climate.
Makhtal, who came to Canada as a refugee in 1991 and became a citizen three years later, was in Somalia in December 2006 on business when Ethiopian troops invaded the country. He was arrested as he tried to flee across the border to Kenya.
He was then deported to Ethiopia.
Said Makthal, Cousin of Bashir Makhtal spoke at a press conference about Bashir Makhtal’s case, in Ottawa , June 12, 2012. (Chris Roussakis/QMI Agency)
Amnesty International says Makhtal reported torture and ill-treatment during his imprisonment.
Makhtal arrived in Canada Saturday on a flight from the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, and was greeted by friends and family at the airport.
Bashir Makhtal, imprisoned in Ethiopia for 11 years, back in Canada | Toronto Sun
 

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Conservative motion demands Trudeau government take action to curb influx of illegal border crossings
Canadian Press
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Published:
April 24, 2018
Updated:
April 24, 2018 5:54 PM EDT
A family, claiming to be from Colombia, is arrested by RCMP officers as they cross the border into Canada from the United States as asylum seekers on Wednesday, April 18, 2018 near Champlain, NY.Paul Chiasson / THE CANADIAN PRESS
OTTAWA — As an influx of illegal border crossings by asylum seekers continues to cause pressures in Quebec, the issue is creating mounting tensions between the Liberals and Conservatives in the House of Commons.
The Trudeau Liberals and the Opposition Conservatives blamed each other Tuesday for problems caused by a spike in refugee claimants entering Canada illegally from the U.S. — an influx that does not appear to be slowing down.
“This has been an issue for well over a year, but this prime minister has failed to take any concrete steps to address the situation,” Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer said.
“Meanwhile, families here in Canada who are waiting to be reunited with a loved one or refugees facing real danger have to wait longer because of the government’s inaction. Why?”
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau countered that lengthy delays for processing refugee claims were caused by a cut in funding to the Canada Border Services Agency by the former Conservative administration of Stephen Harper.
“I think people will be forgiven for rolling their eyes when the Conservatives talk about supporting refugees or accelerating process for family reunification. Their cuts left us with significant backlogs,” Trudeau said.
“They tried to get rid of backlogs by using the delete button.”
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau rises during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, April 24, 2018. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang Justin Tang / THE CANADIAN PRESS
The issue dominated Tuesday’s debate in the Commons, thanks to an Opposition day motion from the Conservatives calling for a plan to be tabled by May 11 to stop the flow of border crossers coming into Canada at unofficial entry points in Quebec and Ontario.
Conservative immigration critic Michelle Rempel accused the government of simply throwing money at the problem of irregular migration rather than coming up with a demonstrable plan to make it stop.
“This is the second summer that we’re going into a potential immigration crisis without a plan, and certainly we expect the government to do better.”
Conservative MP Michelle Rempel asks a question during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, April 24, 2018. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang Justin Tang / THE CANADIAN PRESS
Last year, RCMP intercepted a total of 20,493 people who crossed the border illegally. So far this year, 6,373 irregular migrants have arrived in Canada this way — more than double the 2,784 irregular migrants who arrived in Canada between January and April 2017.
This influx has caused a “clearly unsustainable” backlog of files at the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB), according to documents obtained by The Canadian Press through access-to-information legislation.
The documents show the arms-length body responsible for adjudicating asylum claims has been struggling to deal with the massive influx of files. A response team was initiated last year to cope with the increased workload and long wait times. But without additional resources, the IRB’s streaming processes and improvements were swallowed by the increase in cases.
The number of claims reached record levels in 2017 and the IRB’s backlog tripled from fewer than 15,000 cases in 2015 to over 50,000 by the end of 2017.
Asylum seekers sit in front of their tent in a temporary camp, Tuesday, August 15, 2017 near Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson Paul Chiasson / THE CANADIAN PRESS
The government has said it is working to ease pressures caused by the surge in asylum claims, including dedicating $74 million this year to help reduce backlogs at the IRB. New spending has also been allocated for the agencies that deal with irregular migrants at the border, including $72 million over two years for the Canada Border Services Agency, $10 million over one year for the RCMP and $2 million over one year to the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.
But Rempel said none of these financial measures appear to be stopping asylum seekers from continuing to stream into Canada. She said she’s concerned the public’s support for immigration and newcomers could turn if nothing is done to stop the flow of illegal border crossings.
Conservative motion demands Trudeau take action on asylum influx | Toronto Sun
 

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Toronto seeks help for dealing with refugee claimants in shelters
Canadian Press
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Published:
April 26, 2018
Updated:
April 26, 2018 1:20 PM EDT
Mayor John Tory (Antonella Artuso/Toronto Sun)
TORONTO — The City of Toronto has issued an urgent appeal to the federal and provincial governments for help dealing with the growing number of refugee claimants in its shelter system.
Mayor John Tory said Thursday that the number of refugee claimants in the city’s shelters has grown from an average of 459 per night in 2016, to an average of 2,351 per night this month. He said the latest figure represents 37.6 per cent of those in the system.
Tory said if those levels continue the city will incur $64.5 million in costs related to providing shelter and housing for refugee claimants by the end of this year.
“As is the case with the general shelter population, it would seem that Toronto ends up taking on responsibility for the entire region without the funding support that recognizes that,” Tory said.
The city has taken measures to expand the capacity of its shelter system over the past 18 months, Tory said. But Toronto has reached the limits of its ability to independently address the resettlement of the refugee claimants, he added.
The city has asked the federal and provincial governments to help co-ordinate the immediate placement of new arrivals to locations outside of its shelter system. It has also asked for dedicated staff to co-ordinate services for refugee claimants.
“We are committed to providing shelter and support to all those who need it,” Tory said. “Our staff is working hard every day to keep people safe and with a roof over their heads … But we can no longer do it alone.”
The city said its shelter system serves approximately 19,000 people per year. This month, it has served an average of 6,241 people per night — with 2,351 of those being refugee claimants and 3,890 non-refugee claimants.
Premier Kathleen Wynne said the province will work with the city to address the pressure on its shelter system. It will continue to look for surplus provincial buildings which can be used as shelter space, she said.
“I really believe that as a country, and certainly as a province, we have always stepped up to shelter people who are looking for refuge,” she said.
“I don’t think this is a new situation for Ontario or Canada … We have a big geography, we have a multicultural society, we understand what it means to be looking for refuge.”
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada did not immediately comment on Toronto’s request.

Toronto seeks help for dealing with refugee claimants in shelters | Toronto Sun
 

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'WE'RE FULL: Immigration officials tell asylum seekers crossing at capacity
Associated Press
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Published:
April 29, 2018
Updated:
April 29, 2018 10:39 PM EDT
SAN DIEGO — A group of Central Americans who journeyed in a caravan to the U.S. border resolved to turn themselves in and ask for asylum Sunday in a direct challenge to the Trump administration — only to have U.S. immigration officials announce that the San Diego crossing was already at capacity.
Nearly 200 migrants, many travelling with children, had decided to apply for protection at the nation’s busiest border crossing after many fled violence in their home countries, organizers said. The caravan got attention after President Donald Trump and members of his Cabinet called it a threat to the United States.
Shortly before the migrants were expected to arrive, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said San Diego’s San Ysidro crossing would not immediately be able to handle more asylum seekers. It can hold about 300 people at a time, and officials had been warning that it might fill up.
“At this time, we have reached capacity at the San Ysidro port of entry for CBP officers to be able to bring additional persons travelling without appropriate entry documentation into the port of entry for processing,” Commissioner Kevin McAleenan said in a statement. “Those individuals may need to wait in Mexico as CBP officers work to process those already within our facilities.”
He said the crossing could take in additional people as space and resources become available.
Despite the announcement, about 50 people walked across a bridge and approached the port facility, but were not immediately accommodated by U.S. officials. They were being permitted to wait in passageways until room became available, and appeared prepared to wait overnight, according to Irineo Mujica, one of the organizers of Pueblos Sin Fronteras, an organization assisting the asylum speakers.
Another 50 prepared to camp outside a gate on the Mexican side of the border crossing with backpacks and blankets hoping to get their turn on Monday.
Pro-migrant caravan demonstrators rally on the Mexican side of the border wall on April 29, 2018 in San Diego, California. More than 300 immigrants, the remnants of a caravan of Central Americans that journeyed across Mexico to ask for asylum in the United States, have reached the border to apply for legal entry. Bill Wechter / Getty Images
Nicole Ramos, an attorney working on behalf of caravan members, expressed disbelief that U.S. authorities cannot process more asylum seekers until its backlog eases.
“They have been well aware that a caravan is going to arrive at the border,” she said at a news conference. “The failure to prepare and failure to get sufficient agents and resources is not the fault of the most vulnerable among us. We can build a base in Iraq in under a week. We can’t process 200 refugees. I don’t believe it.”
The migrants had made their way north by foot, freight train and bus over the past month, many saying they feared for their lives in their home countries.
The Trump administration has been tracking the caravan since it started in Mexico on March 25 near the Guatemala border. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has called the caravan “a deliberate attempt to undermine our laws and overwhelm our system.”
Administration officials have railed against what they call America’s “catch and release” policies that allow people requesting asylum to be released from custody into the U.S. while their claims make their way through the courts, a process that can last a year.
Wendi Yaneri Garcia said she is confident she will be released while her asylum case is pending because she is travelling alone with her 2-year-old son, who has been sick.
“All I want is a place where I can work and raise my son,” the 36-year-old said.
She said that police in her hometown of Atlantida, Honduras, jailed her for protesting construction of a hydroelectric plant and that she received death threats after being released.
Nefi Hernandez, 24, said a gang in his hometown of San Pedro Sula, Honduras, threatened to kill him and his family if he did not sell drugs. He intended to seek asylum with his wife and baby daughter, who was born on the journey through Mexico.
Jose Cazares, 31, said he faced death threats in the Honduran city of Yoro because a gang member suspected of killing the mother of his children learned one of his sons reported the crime to police.
Earlier Sunday, the migrants boarded five old school buses to attend a rally at a Pacific Ocean beach, with supporters gathering on both sides of the border fence and some climbing the barrier to sit or to wave signs.
The travellers face an uncertain future if they ask for asylum. U.S. immigration lawyers warned them that they face possible separation from their children and detention for many months.
Pro-migrant caravan demonstrators rally on the Mexican side of the border wall on April 29, 2018 in San Diego, California. More than 300 immigrants, the remnants of a caravan of Central Americans that journeyed across Mexico to ask for asylum in the United States, have reached the border to apply for legal entry. Bill Wechter / Getty Images
Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said asylum claims will be resolved “efficiently and expeditiously.” But she warned that any asylum seekers making false claims could be prosecuted, as could anyone who assists the migrants in doing so.
Administration officials and their allies claim that asylum fraud is growing and that many who seek it are coached on how to do so.
Asylum seekers are typically held for up to three days at the border and then turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. If they pass an asylum officer’s initial screening, they may be detained or released into the U.S. with ankle monitors.
‘WE’RE FULL: Immigration officials tell asylum seekers crossing at capacity | Toronto Sun
 

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How many days are left on the illegals travel visa's that Mexico issued for them to cross to try to enter the U.S.?

What will Mexico do if the travel visa's expire before the illegals cross into the states?
 

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MALCOLM: Border services working with RCMP on migrants raises questions
Candice Malcolm
Published:
April 30, 2018
Updated:
April 30, 2018 3:38 PM EDT
A family from Haiti approach a tent in Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Quebec, stationed by Royal Canadian Mounted Police, as they haul their luggage down Roxham Road in Champlain, N.Y., Monday, Aug. 7, 2017. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Evidence exclusively obtained by the Toronto Sun suggests that the Canadian Border Service Agency (CBSA) is co-operating with the RCMP in dealing with the flood of migrants entering Canada illegally. This is significant given that CBSA deals exclusively with legal border crossings, while the RCMP is responsible for illegal crossing.
Working together suggests a blurring of responsibility, and raises further questions about why our immigration laws are not being enforced at unofficial crossings.
This past weekend, a CBSA vehicle was parked at the popular Roxham Road illegal border crossing in rural Quebec. This is the location where upwards of 6,000 people have already crossed in 2018, tripling 2017’s numbers in the first three months.
It is unknown why a CBSA vehicle was there or how long it had been there. CBSA declined to comment for this column. The RCMP officials stationed at the border would not answer questions from the Sun about the vehicle.
Thinking they were speaking to a unilingual journalist, the officials joked in French that they should put a sticker over the CBSA logo on the vehicle to prevent other journalists from seeing it.
According to a recent media briefing from federal officials, illegal border crossings fall under the jurisdiction of the RCMP. Mounties, therefore, and not CBSA officials receive and arrest the asylum seekers who cross illegally at this spot every day.
Migrants cross at this location, rather than an official border crossing, specifically to avoid CBSA officials who enforce the Safe Third Country Agreement – the Canada-U.S. treaty that prevents U.S.-based migrants from seeking asylum in Canada, and vice-versa.
Crossing into Canada illegally and making their asylum claim once in Canada has become a loophole that allows migrants to avoid CBSA officials – and avoid the law that prevents Canada from accepting asylum seekers via the U.S.
The refusal of border officers to discuss these matters with the media is not the choice of local officials, but a top-down edict from the Trudeau government.
An internal memo from the Trudeau government’s department of public safety, obtained by Le Journal de Montreal, instructed Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) officers not to discuss illegal immigration with the media. While the memo made news in the French-language media in Quebec, the English mainstream media failed to pick up the story.
The memo, which muzzles officers and prevents them from sharing this story with Canadians, stated that “only designated spokespersons can make statements or observations to the media about field operations.”
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MALCOLM: Border services working with RCMP on migrants raises questions | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

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U.S. customs officials find tiger cub stuffed in duffel bag abandoned by smugglers along Texas border
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
May 1, 2018
Updated:
May 1, 2018 5:32 PM EDT
This April 30, 2018 photo provided by U.S Customs and Border Protection shows a male tiger in a duffle bag that was seized at the border near Brownsville, Texas.U.S. Customs and Border Protection via AP
BROWNSVILLE, Texas — Smugglers left behind a live tiger cub in a duffel bag when they fled back to Mexico after attempting to cross the Rio Grande into Texas.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials on Tuesday said the male tiger, believed to be three or four months old, has been placed at the Gladys Porter Zoo in Brownsville.
This April 30, 2018 photo provided by U.S Customs and Border Protection shows a male tiger on an exam table at the Gladys Porter Zoo in Brownsville, Texas. U.S. Customs and Border Protection via AP
Border Patrol agents patrolling Monday along the river near Brownsville saw three people trying to enter the U.S. illegally. An agency statement says the trio abandoned a bag and returned to Mexico.
This April 30, 2018 photo provided by U.S Customs and Border Protection shows agents carrying a male tiger in a duffle bag that was seized at the border near Brownsville, Texas, into the the Gladys Porter Zoo in Brownsville. U.S. Customs and Border Protection via AP
Officers discovered the cub stuffed in the bag. Agent Robert Rodriguez said Tuesday that the tiger appeared calm and was possibly sedated.

U.S. customs officials find tiger cub stuffed in duffel bag abandoned by smugglers along Texas border | Toronto Sun

MALCOLM: Official says CBSA being 'muzzled' by Trudeau government
Candice Malcolm
Published:
May 2, 2018
Updated:
May 2, 2018 7:48 AM EDT
Asylum seekers line up to receive boxed lunches after entering Canada from the U.S. at Roxham Rd. in Hemmingford, Que., in this Aug. 9, 2017 file photo. Graham Hughes / THE CANADIAN PRESS
Border guards assigned to keep Canada safe are blowing the whistle on the Trudeau government.
CBSA officials are being “muzzled” and the Trudeau government is not properly enforcing the law, according to a CBSA official who reached out to the Toronto Sun for an exclusive interview.
“This government is making it up as they go along,” said the irritated CBSA officer, who asked to remain anonymous because, in his words, “we are muzzled.”
“But, I can tell you that the rank and file cadre has had it ‘up to here’ as with the rest of the growing number of frustrated Canadians out there,” he said.
As reported exclusively in the Sun, a CBSA vehicle was parked at the popular illegal border entry along Roxham Rd. in rural Quebec. This raises serious questions about why CBSA is stationed at an unofficial crossing, and why they’re not enforcing Canada’s immigration laws.
According to a media briefing attended by the Sun last month, it is the RCMP — and not CBSA — who is “responsible for enforcement between official Ports of Entry.”
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EDITORIAL: Border crisis needs facts, not muzzling
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MALCOLM: Border services working with RCMP on migrants raises questions
MALCOLM: Immigration program getting worse under Trudeau
RCMP arrest migrants who enter Canada illegally, and then “transfer to CBSA for (immigration) processing,” according to a government backgrounder on the process for illegal entry and asylum claims.
If, however, the CBSA is stationed at the illegal border crossing on Roxham Rd., as proven by the Sun report, CBSA should be enforcing border and immigration laws. Specifically, they should be applying the Safe Third Country Agreement that prohibits asylum seekers coming from safe countries like the United States.
Both CBSA and RCMP officially refused to comment on the situation at Roxham Rd., or explain why CBSA was stationed at an illegal entry point.
“You couldn’t be more spot on,” said the CBSA officer about the Sun report. He went on to explain this contradiction in greater detail.
“If (CBSA) powers only apply in custom controlled areas, and CBSA is stationed (at Roxham Rd.),” it means one of two things, he explained.
Either Roxham Rd. is now “a customs-controlled area and an official crossing where the safe third country (law) is now as applicable as anywhere else,” or, “it is not an official crossing and all actions taken by CBSA officers are null and void,” he said.
“Meaning all illegal migrants should be made to proceed to an official port of entry immediately, where the (safe third country laws) will now apply to all of them.”
More than 50,000 asylum claims were made in 2017, the highest number in our history. Almost half of those claims came from people who crossed illegally from the U.S., most at this one location on Roxham Rd.
So far in 2018, the number of border jumpers has already tripled since last year.
The CBSA official also mentioned his disappointment towards Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s role in sparking this surge of illegal immigration into Canada, and his government’s failure to stop it.
“These migrants can read Trudeau’s Twitter but can’t read the sign saying their crossing is illegal?” he asked skeptically, referring to large signs placed on the New York side of Roxham Rd.
“Stop: It is illegal to cross the border here or any place other than a Port of Entry. You will be arrested and detained if you cross here,” reads the sign, which migrants walk right past on their way into Canada.
“Give me a break,” said the frustrated CBSA officer.
MALCOLM: Official says CBSA being ‘muzzled’ by Trudeau government | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

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Liberals plan to build temporary housing for asylum seekers at Quebec border crossing
Canadian Press
Published:
May 4, 2018
Updated:
May 4, 2018 3:12 PM EDT
An RCMP officer standing in Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que., advises migrants that they are about to illegally cross from Champlain, N.Y., and will be arrested, Monday, Aug. 7, 2017.Charles Krupa / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OTTAWA — The federal government is planning to build temporary housing for up to 520 people at a Quebec border crossing that has been the scene of an influx of asylum seekers.
Public Works and the Canada Border Services Agency say in a notice that the housing units are for Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle — the municipality where the majority of RCMP interceptions of irregular migrants in Quebec take place.
The Opposition says the Liberal government is effectively setting up a refugee camp at the Canada-U.S. border by building the housing.
“I’m not sure any Canadian would think that this is an acceptable response,” Conservative immigration critic Michelle Rempel said Friday.
In this Aug. 7, 2017 file photo, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer informs a migrant couple of the location of a legal border station, shortly before they illegally crossed from Champlain, N.Y., to Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Quebec, using Roxham Road. Charles Krupa / AP
Rempel said there is a frustrating lack of information flowing from the government about the makeup and needs of asylum seekers.
“How can I say how much money they should be needing when we don’t even know what their needs are? And that is the result of having no plan for immigration. It’s bananas,” she said.
The majority of irregular crossings currently take place in Quebec.
I'm not sure any Canadian would think that this is an acceptable response.
— Conservative MP Michelle Rempel
The housing notice calls for “heated, ventilated and illuminated canvas shelters” for three-season use that must include areas for sleeping, security, reception and warehousing. The government is also looking for other units to serve as quarantine space, toilets and showers as well as systems for drinking water and drainage.
Tens of tents were set up at the Lacolle crossing in August of last year, many of which were dismantled when numbers of asylum seekers slowed.
Asylum seekers sit in front of their tent in a temporary camp, Tuesday, August 15, 2017 near Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que. Paul Chiasson / THE CANADIAN PRESS
About 2,500 asylum seekers crossed into Canada from the U.S. in April, Mike MacDonald, a senior Immigration Department official, told the House of Commons immigration committee on Thursday.
MacDonald said the figure was just an estimate and that the exact number for April would be known “in the fullness of time.”
Rempel said it wasn’t good enough that federal officials came to testify without having an exact number.
“That’s not fair,” she said. “This is of immediate concern.”
On Friday, the Trump administration cancelled temporary protected status for Hondurans in the U.S., similar to what it did to Haitians and El Salvadorans, which triggered last year’s influx of border crossers.
Liberals plan to build temporary housing for asylum seekers at Quebec border crossing | Toronto Sun
 

justlooking

Council Member
May 19, 2017
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Call it what it is. A jail.


I wish it was, but it won't be.

Because one would go from jail, back to Honduras.

Not jail, welcome and benefits registration center.


Nearly 60,000 Hondurans are told to leave or be deported after 19 years in the US, as Trump administration ends the protection scheme for the country


  • 57,000 Honduras citizens will need to leave by January 1 2020 or be deported
  • The Trump administration has ended Temporary Protection Status for Honduras
  • Nearly 60,000 people have been in the US since Hurricane Mitch in 1998
  • The hurricane killed more than 11,000 and caused more than $5billion in damage