The News (New Glasgow)

Breathing room

New Trump travel ban under review by Liberals watching for border impact

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A delay in implementa­tion of the new iteration of U.S. President Donald Trump’s controvers­ial immigratio­n ban has bought Canadian officials some breathing room as they try to figure out whether anyone in Canada could be affected by new executive order unveiled Monday.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said the Canadian government will review the revised version to fully understand what’s at stake, but for the moment it appears Canadian citizens or permanent residents will be treated as they always have been.

“Obviously, this is a detailed matter with some careful nuances and we’re going to be looking at all of the details so that we can provide Canadians with complete informatio­n about everything they need to know,” he said.

The revised travel order leaves Iraq off the list of banned countries, but still affects would-be visitors and immigrants to the U.S. from Iran, Syria, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen and Libya who currently do not hold a valid U.S. visa. It also suspends

the U.S. refugee program for 120 days, though refugees already formally scheduled for travel will be allowed entry. The revised order comes into effect on March 16.

Canadian officials were left scrambling in January by Trump’s original executive order, which came down late on a Friday afternoon and immediatel­y threw global travel into chaos as border, airline, customs and other officials were unsure about

how and to whom it exactly applied.

Among other things, many Canadian permanent residents who were holders of Nexus cards that are supposed to speed entry into the U.S. found themselves turned away, while some American visa holders in Canada feared being unable to return home.

While the federal immigratio­n minister implemente­d a temporary public policy to assist those who could have been stranded, his department continues to decline to release statistics on how many people applied for help under that policy and were issued temporary visas.

But what is known is that hundreds of people have come to Canada from the U.S. to seek asylum since the original travel ban was implemente­d, a phenomenon now under careful scrutiny by Goodale and other federal department­s.

The federal cabinet will discuss the issue today and cabinet ministers will also have the chance to grill U.S. Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly on those issues when he comes to Ottawa later this week for a meeting.

“We need to make sure we are sharing informatio­n and operating on the same fact base on both sides of the border,” Goodale said.

The original order sparked protests around the country and was ultimately blocked by U.S. federal courts, but some civil liberties associatio­ns said Monday the new one still doesn’t pass muster as the ban is in place for predominan­tly Muslim countries and as such, constitute­s discrimina­tion on the basis of religion.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Public Safety and Emergency Preparedne­ss Minister Ralph Goodale responds to a question in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill.
CP PHOTO Public Safety and Emergency Preparedne­ss Minister Ralph Goodale responds to a question in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill.

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