Medicine Hat News

Response to border crossers shows system working: PM

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OTTAWA Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sought Wednesday to combat criticism that thousands of people arriving at the Canada U.S. border to seek asylum are throwing the immigratio­n system into chaos.

On the contrary, he said everything is working as it should.

“I can understand the concerns Canadians share about whether this is a short cut, whether this is somehow uncontroll­ed immigratio­n,” he said following a meeting in Montreal with federal and provincial officials overseeing response efforts.

“What I’m very pleased to be able to say . . . is that the rules on Canada’s immigratio­n system continue to be enforced.”

Nearly 10,000 people have been apprehende­d at the border since the start of the year as they’ve sought to enter Canada in order to claim refugee status — almost equivalent to the total claims filed for all of 2013. Of those who have arrived this year, nearly 7,000 have arrived just since July, the vast majority at an unofficial crossing point between Quebec and New York.

Temporary camps to house them have been set up at border, and hundreds of others have been bussed to Cornwall, Ont., to be housed there while the preliminar­y process of applying for asylum begins.

The government has also redeployed dozens of police, border guards and immigratio­n officers to manage the problem and is also now focusing on how to best support the new arrivals while they await a hearing on their refuge claim.

Trudeau said one option being explored is accelerati­ng the process to give them temporary work permits so they’ll be less dependent on the temporary social supports in place.

However, Conservati­ve immigratio­n critic Michelle Rempel blasted Trudeau’s handling of what she called a crisis.

Camps on the border and asking an already overwhelme­d immigratio­n and settlement system to do more with no additional resources is not a solution, she told a news conference Wednesday.

She said the opposition has been raising the issue for months, since the arrivals at the border numbered only in the dozens, but the government’s response continues to fall short.

“A photo op after a meeting will not cut it,” she said.

“The prime minister of Canada, in order to help the world’s most vulnerable and to salvage the Canadian asylum claim system needs to come up with a credible plan and he needs to explain it to Canadians.”

Many who’re arriving in Canada are propelled by changing immigratio­n policy in the U.S. that began with President Donald Trump’s first attempt in January to block immigratio­n to the U.S. from certain predominan­tly Muslim countries and halt the refugee program.

 ?? CP PHOTO GRAHAM HUGHES ?? NDP MP Jenny Kwan says the Liberal government is misleading people when it says there’s no advantage to crossing illegally into Canada to seek asylum. Asylum seekers line up to receive boxed lunches after entering Canada from the United States at...
CP PHOTO GRAHAM HUGHES NDP MP Jenny Kwan says the Liberal government is misleading people when it says there’s no advantage to crossing illegally into Canada to seek asylum. Asylum seekers line up to receive boxed lunches after entering Canada from the United States at...

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