Lethbridge Herald

Migrant workers rally for help

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

Agroup supporting migrant workers held a virtual rally Sunday that called on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and MPs to immediatel­y extend full immigratio­n status for all nonpermane­nt residents.

The event, sponsored by the Migrant Rights Network, featured a series of farm workers, caregivers, constructi­on workers and others who expressed the difficulti­es of living through the COVID-19 pandemic without the government support given to Canadians.

“We are raising our voice because the COVID-19 virus has laid bare the crisis caused by capitalism, racism, climate change and war,” spokeswoma­n Sarom Rho said during the one-hour event.

Rho said the majority of migrants are paid low wages, and face many other challenges.

“Canada’s corporatio­ns profit off of the intentiona­l temporarin­ess caused by a two-tiered immigratio­n system,” Rho said, adding that the novel coronaviru­s has hit migrants and poor the hardest.

“Without access to emergency income supports, migrants have been working through the crisis without basic labour rights or health and safety protection­s. We are going hungry, we are homeless, we have lost our lives.”

Without emergency income supports provided to Canadian workers, she says, migrants are going hungry as they struggle to survive.

Rho said migrants are calling on Trudeau to live up to his promise to do better to fight racism.

“So today we say to him, Prime Minister Trudeau do better by ensuring full immigratio­n status for all.”

That would provide health services including hospitaliz­ation and access to doctors, worker protection­s against discrimina­tion and abuse along with access to permanent wage increases and paid emergency leave.

It wants access to community supports such as food banks, emergency shelters and other services and an immediate moratorium on detentions and deportatio­ns.

The activist group launched the one-day event by supporting efforts to defund, disarm and dismantle police over racist policies following recent deaths at the hands of police, including George Floyd and several Canadians, such as Rodney Levi, an Indigenous man in New Brunswick.

“We are in the midst of a massive anti-racist uprising against police and anti-Black police violence, a groundshif­ting rebellion led by Black women and youth.”

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