Cape Breton Post

Trudeau says he won’t ‘play politics’ on U.S. migrant children policy

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he will not “play politics’’ over immigratio­n policies when it comes to the controvers­ial U.S. practice of charging and separating illegal migrants from their children when they cross the border into the United States.

The U.S. government is

under fire over its “zero tolerance’’ policy, including from the chief of United Nations Human Rights Council, who calls the practice “unconscion­able.’’

During question period, NDP immigratio­n critic Jenny Kwan urged Trudeau to suspend Canada’s Safe Third Country agreement with the U.S. in response to the policy, under which nearly 2,000 children

have been separated from their parents and placed in holding facilities.

Trudeau says he won’t play politics over the issue, saying his role as prime minister is to stand up for Canadian values but also to maintain a constructi­ve relationsh­ip with the U.S.

Meanwhile, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says children of immigrants and

refugees are detained only as a last resort in Canada and new measures will soon be rolled out to offer alternativ­es to detaining migrants.

Concerns have been raised in the past over the number of migrant children detained every year by Canadian border officials. Last year, 162 minors were detained or housed with their parents in Canadian immigratio­n holding centres.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodale speaks during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa.
CP PHOTO Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodale speaks during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa.

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