The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Canada’s border closures shut out asylum seekers

- JULIE GORDON

OTTAWA — Hong Kong’s new security law has prompted a sharp uptick in inquiries from families looking to relocate to Canada, but Ottawa’s strict COVID-19 border control measures are making it nearly impossible to get in, immigratio­n lawyers said.

Even before the law took effect this week, refugee claims from Hong Kong in the first three months of 2020 nearly tripled to 25 compared with nine in all of 2019 and just two in all of 2018, Canadian government data shows.

Admissions of new permanent residents from Hong Kong jumped 75.7% in January and February 2020 compared to the previous year, as Beijing’s crackdown on pro-democracy protesters escalated.

Claims from all countries have plunged since March amid COVID-19 closures.

Beijing imposed the legislatio­n on Hong Kong this week despite protests from Hong Kong residents and Western nations, setting China’s freest city and a major financial hub on a more authoritar­ian track.

Canada was a preferred destinatio­n for Hong Kong citizens who fled the island city ahead of the British handover to China in 1997, and some 300,000 people in Hong Kong hold Canadian passports.

Most who came in the 1990s have left and interest in relocating from Hong Kong to Canada has been tepid in recent years.

But in the days since China imposed the security law, Vancouver immigratio­n lawyer Richard Kurland has found himself consulting with people by phone, email and Zoom on how to get from Hong Kong into Canada.

“This week is the gamechangi­ng week with the new security law,” said Kurland. “Now families are taking things seriously.”

Moving to Canada will not be as easy as it was in the ‘90s. A program that allowed wealthy foreigners to buy admission to Canada was scrapped in 2014. And the border is currently closed until at least the end of July due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, with only citizens, permanent residents and others deemed essential allowed in.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A passenger walks towards the gates for U.S. travel at Toronto Pearson Internatio­nal Airport in Toronto on June 23.
REUTERS A passenger walks towards the gates for U.S. travel at Toronto Pearson Internatio­nal Airport in Toronto on June 23.

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