Montreal Gazette

Audit sparks reform calls for border agency

- JanIce dIckson

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 in2016.

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.

In its response to the audit, the IRB accepted the review’s various recommenda­tions for improvemen­t, including working with the border agency on treating people in detention fairly.

Lobat Sadrehashe­mi, president of the Canadian Associatio­n of Refugee Lawyers, said the audit is proof of what advocates have known for years — that immigratio­n detention in Canada is “cloaked in unfairness” and needs systemic reform.

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