Ottawa Citizen

MIGRANTS HUDDLE AGAINST THE COLD AS A SPANISH SHIP THAT RESCUED THEM FRIDAY TAKES THEM TO ITALY. A HALF A WORLD AWAY, AFRICANS AFRAID TO STAY IN THE U.S. CONTINUE TO SNEAK INTO CANADA.

U.S. WOMAN SHOCKED FRIEND WALKED TO CANADA

- LAUREN KRUGEL in Minneapoli­s

Saciido Shaie says something seemed to be weighing on her friend Mohamed Badal in the days before he vanished. Badal, a Somali man who spent months trekking four continents before landing in the United States, had been preparing to appeal a rejected asylum applicatio­n when Donald Trump became president.

“For an entire week he was anxious, he was scared,” Shaie says over tea at Daalo Grill, a Minneapoli­s East African restaurant where she, Badal and a big group of friends would regularly hang out.

The Trump administra­tion’s hardline views on immigratio­n have rattled many in the midwestern city’s large Somali community, regardless of their immigratio­n status, says Shaie, a community activist.

Trump singled out Somali newcomers at a campaign rally in Minneapoli­s two days before November’s election, saying the city had “suffered enough” from their presence. Somalia was also among seven Muslim-majority countries targeted in a travel ban imposed suddenly last month, which has since been halted in court.

Shaie says her friend, who had been authorized to work night shifts in a warehouse, feared he could be arrested and deported at any moment. She says he feared having to return to the war-torn homeland he had fled.

“You don’t want to go back to Somalia right now. There’s no opportunit­y. There’s nothing there,” she says. “You have people who are 20-something who have not even been to school.”

She noticed Badal hadn’t stopped by Daalo Grill in a while and when she tried calling, his phone was disconnect­ed. No one else in their circle of friends seemed to know where he was.

When Badal finally reached Shaie, he was in Winnipeg.

“You’re kidding me,” she recalls saying. “How did you end up there?”

He told her he walked for hours in the freezing cold through a snowy field in order to cross from North Dakota into Manitoba. He left his car in Minneapoli­s, so Shaie figures he must have gotten a lift to a town near the border.

By the time Canadian authoritie­s found Badal, one of his legs was swollen from the cold and he could barely speak.

“He told me that he thought he was going to die,” Shaie says, recounting their conversati­on a few days after he entered Canada.

“So if he died, no one would have known where he’d end up.”

Badal was among dozens of refuge-seekers found trudging through snow-covered prairie along the border near the town of Emerson, Man., in recent weeks. Most are from Somalia, Ghana and other African countries. On Sunday, RCMP said in a news release that 22 people were intercepte­d overnight illegally crossing the border near Emerson.

There’s nothing new about people eschewing official border crossings between the U.S. and Canada, though RCMP say the numbers have been on the rise in recent months. The tactic is a way to get around the Canada-U.S. Safe Third Country Agreement, which would cause anyone who had already applied for refugee status in the U.S. to be turned away at an official border crossing in Canada. But if a person crosses somewhere else and applies as a refugee, the case is heard by Canadian authoritie­s.

Shaie says her friend is doing fine and has since travelled to Toronto, where he has family. She wishes she knew beforehand what he was planning to do.

“I would have said ‘you’re crazy.’ I wouldn’t have let him go,” she says.

“I would have said ‘we’ll figure out something, we’ll advocate for you, find something for you.’ But walk to Canada?”

 ?? DAVID RAMOS / GETTY IMAGES ??
DAVID RAMOS / GETTY IMAGES
 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Saciido Shaie shows a picture of herself and friend Mohamed Badal at a Somali restaurant in Minneapoli­s, Minn. Badal left the U.S. last week to attempt entry into Canada and didn’t tell his friends of his plans.
JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Saciido Shaie shows a picture of herself and friend Mohamed Badal at a Somali restaurant in Minneapoli­s, Minn. Badal left the U.S. last week to attempt entry into Canada and didn’t tell his friends of his plans.

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