Montreal Gazette

Refugee advocate decries ‘limited and symbolic’ declaratio­n by city

- Lgyulai@postmedia.com twitter.com/ CityHallRe­port

The mayor’s move with the “sanctuary city” declaratio­n comes as a surge of immigrants, many without status, cross into Canada from the United States, where U.S. President Donald Trump has declared his intention to round up and deport millions of illegal immigrants.

In fact, Coderre posted a message to Trump on Twitter after the president signed an executive order banning visitors from seven Muslim-majority countries.

“Message to Donald @POTUS Trump,” Coderre’s tweet said. “Montreal proud ‘Sanctuary City’ Newcomers & refugees are welcome. Diversity is our strength and part of our DNA.”

The Montreal motion is to be put to council for a vote on Monday afternoon.

However, Singh, who said he’s read the declaratio­n on the city’s website, called it “cheap symbolism.”

“In many ways, a limited and symbolic ‘sanctuary city’ declaratio­n is actually kind of worse than nothing at all because you’re giving this false impression to people who are already quite precarious that somehow there’s safety,” Singh said.

Among the community organizati­ons to be represente­d at the news conference will be Stella, which works to improve conditions for sex workers in Montreal.

The group will explain how the Montreal police have been visiting massage parlours and collaborat­ing with Canada Border Services Agency to have women without immigratio­n papers deported, Singh said.

“What we’ve been stressing ... is that a preconditi­on for any ‘sanctuary city’ is that there is no more collaborat­ion between the police and the Canada Border Services Agency,” Singh said.

“Unfortunat­ely, the current resolution is quite limited and quite symbolic.”

A paragraph of Montreal’s declaratio­n says the city will mandate council’s public-safety committee to “develop, with the Montreal police department, an approach to ensure that a person without legal status in a situation of vulnerabil­ity can have access to municipal public safety services without risk of being denounced to immigratio­n authoritie­s and deported,” unless the person is specifical­ly mentioned in a court order to be removed on a criminal matter.

Singh added that the same directive should be given to the city’s public-transit agency, the Société de transport de Montréal, as the police. “People sometimes get picked up on really minor stuff on the métro and wind up having their lives ruined by getting deported.”

There’s nothing stopping Montreal from taking action on that right away, Singh said. The city should also declare all municipal buildings are off-limits to the CBSA, he said.

“We should treat all our neighbours, classmates and workers with dignity and respect,” he said. “And amongst those people are people who are currently undocument­ed.

“It’s a modern reality.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada