Medicine Hat News

Audit fuels immigratio­n detention scrutiny

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OTTAWA A highly critical federal audit is fuelling calls for fundamenta­l reforms to Canada’s border agency and the way it deals with detainees during investigat­ions and immigratio­n hearings.

The newly released audit of the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board looks at hearings and decisions in randomly selected cases where immigratio­n detention exceeded a minimum of 100 days.

While the external audit, commission­ed by former IRB chairman Mario Dion, focuses on the Immigratio­n Division of the board, it also shines a light on the role and behaviour of Canada Border Services Agency officers.

The audit uncovered inaccurate statements made by CBSA officers involved in board hearings, immigratio­n adjudicato­rs deciding the fate of cases based on false informatio­n, and detainees left unrepresen­ted and powerless at hearings.

The audit describes the relationsh­ip between the CBSA and the IRB as “regional” with the CBSA being more helpful in some areas than others. The CBSA was reported to be “tougher” in Ontario, more adversaria­l in their hearing conduct, and also more likely to overstate evidence or draw conclusion­s based on speculatio­n rather than fact, states the report.

And in some hearings the Immigratio­n Division official reported being “intimidate­d” by the “vehement positions” expressed by the CBSA hearing officer.

The border agency has authority to detain newcomers to Canada if they are deemed to be a danger to the public, their identity cannot be verified or they are considered a flight risk. The agency holds people in special facilities and, in many cases, in provincial jails across Canada.

In 2017, 3,557 individual­s were held in immigratio­n detention in Canada, a decrease from 3,870 detainees in 2016.

The Liberal government has promised to find more alternativ­es to detention. The CBSA is set to unveil new measures Tuesday intended to spur the release of refugee claimants and other foreign nationals into communitie­s while their cases are being reviewed.

Meanwhile, the House of Commons immigratio­n committee is scheduled to hold an extensive emergency meeting Tuesday on the issue of asylum seekers at the U.S.-Canada border. The committee will hear from federal ministers, experts and others.

The shortest period of detention reviewed by the auditors was four months and the longest was over seven years.

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