Edmonton Journal

PROTECTION FOR AFGHANS

Canada to resettle military, embassy aides

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • The federal government responded to weeks of pressure from Canadian veterans on Friday by announcing that it will fast-track the resettleme­nt of potentiall­y thousands of Afghans who have worked with Canada at different times over the past 20 years.

Yet the trio of cabinet ministers on hand to announce the new immigratio­n measures were surprising­ly light on details, including exactly who will be eligible as well as how and when people now in danger from the Taliban for having helped Canada will start to arrive.

“For operationa­l security reasons, the precise timing of this operation is extremely sensitive,” said Immigratio­n Minister Marco Mendicino, who is leading the effort alongside Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan and Foreign Affairs Marc Garneau.

“For the safety and security of the Afghans as well as the Canadian teams who are already on the ground ... we have to safeguard the precise details of how this operation will be carried out, as well as exactly when it will begin.”

Friday's announceme­nt followed growing concern and frustratio­n within Canada's veterans' community after the sudden withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanista­n in recent weeks emboldened the Taliban to take large swaths of the country.

The captured territory includes parts of the southern province of Kandahar, where the Canadian military spent the longest amount of time during its 13-year mission in the country and fought its bloodiest battles since the Korean War.

Canada lost 158 soldiers and seven civilians in Afghanista­n before the military was withdrawn in 2014, most of them to hostile action by the Taliban.

Now the veterans say those Afghans who supported them as well as their families are facing the threat of retributio­n as the Taliban expands its reach and looks to exact revenge on collaborat­ors.

Mendicino said the government already has teams on the ground working to identify people who are at risk for having worked with Canada, and that immigratio­n officials will fast-track applicatio­ns for asylum from those who qualify.

“Our focus is on those who have had a significan­t and enduring relationsh­ip with the government of Canada,” he said.

“Those eligible will include but are not limited to interprete­rs who worked with the Canadian Forces during the combat mission, locally engaged staff currently or previously employed at the Canadian Embassy, and their families.”

He also encouraged Afghans now living in Canada to reach out to his office directly if they feel their families back at home are at risk and eligible.

Canada previously resettled about 800 Afghan nationals and their families in two separate programs launched in 2008 and 2012, before the end of the military mission.

Asked how many people could be eligible for escape to Canada this time around, Mendicino said: “Without getting into precise numbers, we do anticipate that the numbers will be in the several thousand.”

Mendicino and Sajjan also refused to say how the refugees will get to Canada, including whether Ottawa was fighting for space on evacuation flights planned by the U.S. and other allies.

“Obviously, for operationa­l security reasons, we can't provide the details,” Sajjan said. “But one thing I can assure you that we are involved with the planning the logistics and security of how this will take place.”

He added, without providing detail, that Canada is in contact with its allies.

Friday's announceme­nt had been long anticipate­d after the government faced mounting pressure from Canadian veterans and others worried about former Afghan colleagues who now face arrest and even death at the hands of the Taliban.

Many had questioned why Canada was slow to act compared to the U.S., which is working with NATO to fly about 4,000 Afghan nationals and their families out of the country, and whose Congress has approved tens of thousands of special visas.

The U.S. is also reportedly considerin­g flying tens of thousands of former interprete­rs and others to Kuwait and Bahrain so their immigratio­n applicatio­ns can be processed in safety.

The Conservati­ves and NDP blasted the timing of Friday's announceme­nt, accusing the Liberal government of having been caught unprepared and then dragging its feet until pressured into action.

“The Americans made it clear that they would be leaving Afghanista­n months ago, and the rise of the Taliban was an expected result,” Conservati­ve Leader Erin O'toole said in a statement.

“It's quite disappoint­ing that these Afghans who saved the lives of our men and women in uniform were an afterthoug­ht to this Liberal government.”

The NDP echoed that assessment and criticized the lack of detail, including when Afghans will start being evacuated.

One Canadian veteran involved in the grassroots push to help Afghans agreed the government likely wouldn't have acted if it wasn't for the outcry that preceded Friday's announceme­nt.

But Dave Morrow, a Montreal-area high school teacher who served in Afghanista­n in 2010-11 and has been trying to help Afghan interprete­rs come to Canada for a decade, said the important thing is the government has made a firm commitment.

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 ?? DANISH SIDDIQUI / REUTERS ?? A convoy of Afghan Special Forces is seen during a rescue mission of a policeman who was
surrounded by Taliban fighters at a checkpost in Kandahar province on July 13.
DANISH SIDDIQUI / REUTERS A convoy of Afghan Special Forces is seen during a rescue mission of a policeman who was surrounded by Taliban fighters at a checkpost in Kandahar province on July 13.

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