Cape Breton Post

Entering Canada no ‘free ticket’ to stay: Goodale

- BY JANICE DICKSON

The Liberal government has made it clear that simply entering Canada is not a “free ticket” for newcomers to stay in the country, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale told MPs studying the ongoing influx of asylum seekers from the United States.

But no matter how a person arrives in Canada, the individual must be given a fair hearing to determine whether they require protection, Goodale said during a House of Commons immigratio­n committee meeting Tuesday.

From the moment asylum seekers started crossing into Canada from the U.S. in significan­t numbers, the federal government has made sure that laws are followed and internatio­nal obligation­s are met, he added.

The committee is holding an emergency meeting in the dead of summer at the urging of opposition members to study the issue of asylum seekers at the border.

Canada’s Safe Third Country

agreement with the U.S. stipulates that asylum seekers are required to make their claims in the first “safe” country where they arrive — meaning those who come into Canada at an official land crossing are sent back to make their claim in the U.S.

The agreement does not cover “irregular” or “illegal” asylum seekers — those entering Canada at unofficial points, most notably in Quebec.

According to the most recent

numbers, the RCMP intercepte­d 1,263 people at the border in June, which is down from 1,869 in May.

Conservati­ve immigratio­n critic Michelle Rempel is urging the Liberals to come up with a better plan to deal with the asylum seekers.

During the committee meeting, she pressed the government about extending the Safe Third Country agreement to the entire border.

Bill Blair, the newly appointed minister of border security and organized crime reduction, said the effect of doing so would “be more problemati­c” than the current situation.

Goodale said making every inch of the border an official entry point would mean staffing the 900,000-kilometre length, suggesting that would be impractica­l. In addition, he said, the Americans would have to mirror the effort to make it work.

The government’s plan to address the asylum seeker issue draws on resources from the 2018 budget, said Goodale, who described the border situation as a challenge, not a “crisis” as the Tories allege.

At a news conference before the hearing, Rempel said that so far all Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has done to tackle the migrant issue is shuffle his cabinet and throw money at the problem. Rempel voiced skepticism about Blair’s cabinet appointmen­t, asking whether it was simply a public relations exercise that would create more bureaucrac­y.

“I think the government has a lot of explaining to do.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Public Safety and Emergency Preparedne­ss Minister Ralph Goodale and Minister of Border Security and Organized Crime Reduction Bill Blair arrive to appear as witnesses at a House of Commons standing committee on immigratio­n in Ottawa on Tuesday.
CP PHOTO Public Safety and Emergency Preparedne­ss Minister Ralph Goodale and Minister of Border Security and Organized Crime Reduction Bill Blair arrive to appear as witnesses at a House of Commons standing committee on immigratio­n in Ottawa on Tuesday.

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