National Post (National Edition)

Trudeau’s hospitalit­y proves costly

2017 invitation to refugees sees crush of entries

- Diane francis

U.S. President Donald Trump is an irrepressi­ble and irresponsi­ble tweeter, but so is Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

In January 2017, Trump imposed a “travel ban” on seven Muslim countries, but Trudeau then sent out a holier-than-thou tweet that is costing Canadians hundreds of millions of dollars and creating a permanent burden.

On Jan. 28, 2017 at 4:20 p.m., Trudeau tweeted: “To those fleeing persecutio­n, terror & war, Canadians will welcome you, regardless of your faith. Diversity is our strength #Welcometoc­anada.”

After the Prime Minister’s tweet, embassies were deluged with requests, according to emails obtained by the National Post. Then the flood began. In a world filled with people desperatel­y trying to get into rich countries — and an industry of smugglers to find loopholes to get them in — this was an open invitation to flood into Canada.

Before the tweet, border officials prevented 315 people a month from illegally crossing the border. Posttweet in 2017, about 18,149 illegally crossed the border, then claimed asylum as refugees — even after entering illegally — and were allowed to stay, get welfare, education, housing, health care and work permits. By May 2018, the number of refugee cases pending has jumped to 54,906 from 18,348 in December 2016. That’s the population of Grande Prairie, Alta. or Granby, Que.

Toronto Mayor John Tory has called the situation a “crisis” and said he’s “frustrated” by the lack of help from Ottawa to mitigate a migrant flood that has cost taxpayers more than $64 million and counting.

The crush of entries into Quebec is so great that at least one Quebec politician — leader of the Parti Québécois, Jean-françois Lisée — is calling for a border fence with the U.S.

What’s also reckless is that Canada is not exercising its right to deport those who come in illegally from the U.S. After the September 11 attacks, Ottawa signed the Safe Third Country Agreement with the United States. This means that any non-American seeking refugee protection at Canada’s border must have first filed a refugee claim with the U.S.

The loophole migrant smugglers are using is that the Agreement only refers to those making claims at a “port of entry” and not to those who sneak in illegally. So, they slip in at insecure spots along the border.

But as Conservati­ve immigratio­n critic Michelle Rempel has pointed out, the entire Canadian border should simply be declared a “port of entry.” End of problem.

There is also a national security angle to all this incompeten­ce: Unlike Syrian and other refugees Canada has brought in, these illegal migrants are not screened.

The initial wave consisted of mostly Haitians fearing deportatio­n from the U.S. after Trump announced the end of temporary amnesty for them. More recently, border-crossers are Nigerian, having just arrived on a tourist visa to the U.S., with the sole purpose of slipping into Canada.

“They land in the United States, where they stay for a very short period of time, and then make their way to Canada,” Hursh Jaswal, communicat­ions director for Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen, told The Canadian Press.

Other claimants are from India, Turkey, Mexico, Colombia and Somalia.

Trudeau dithers instead of solving his self-created migrant crisis, and has had to allocate an additional $173 million to process illegal crossings. That figure doesn’t account for the benefits these people get for free.

Trudeau must arrest this and can do so by simply reaffirmin­g all Canada’s borders as ports of entry and then deport all who have arrived illegally back to the United States from which they came.

Border control is what a leader is responsibl­e for, not out-tweeting the leader next door.

 ?? MARLENE AWAAD / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau must reaffirm all Canada’s borders as ports of legal entry, writes Diane Francis.
MARLENE AWAAD / BLOOMBERG FILES Prime Minister Justin Trudeau must reaffirm all Canada’s borders as ports of legal entry, writes Diane Francis.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada