National Post (National Edition)

Trudeau tweet sparked influx of refugee inquiries

- National Post

tweet on welcoming the email began.

“We are receiving an increasing number of enquiries from the public about requesting refugee status in Canada, and a number clearly having links with our Prime Minister’s tweet this weekend. A significan­t number of the enquiries received since the weekend have been from nationals of the ‘US banned countries’, but we are also receiving them from all nationalit­ies, both through emails and directly at our reception.”

The first secretary went on to say that some of the requests had come from Cuban nationals, and that the mission in Costa Rica had been in touch to express concerns about inquiries there, too.

“In the current situation, other missions in our area of responsibi­lities are probably seeing the same thing happening and I think we need to liaise with them and provide formal guidance on how to address these enquiries given the Prime Minister’s tweet,” the official wrote. “A number of clients are asking if it is true that Canada will accept the refugees the US are rejecting, and what is the process to do so . ... I would imagine that missions all around the world are seeing these enquiries increasing since the weekend.”

Much of the ensuing conversati­on — shared with nine Global Affairs Canada email accounts, another six from IRCC and a few that are blanked out — is redacted.

But it shows immigratio­n officials responding with lengthy messages containing response lines developed to clarify Canada’s intentions after the tweet.

An IRCC official told diplomats on Feb. 2 that the lines, approved by the Privy Council Office, were also being shared with officials at the Canada Border Services Agency. The suggested response started with: “We are working with the United Nations Refugee Agency, U.S. officials and our missions abroad to clarify the current situation and determine what our next steps might be.”

Trudeau ultimately stood by the message in his tweet but began adding, during public appearance­s, that “there are steps to go through” to be considered a refugee. Canada did not change the number of refugees it would accept through resettleme­nt programs. But Conservati­ve politician­s would go on to blame the tweet for encouragin­g an uptick in irregular crossings by asylum seekers at the Canada-U. S. border, particular­ly in Manitoba and Quebec.

The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule on the legality of the latest iteration of Trump’s ban, issued in September, by June. refugees,”

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