The Niagara Falls Review

Detained immigrants remain on hunger strike

- Canadian Press

TORONTO — An activist group says at least a dozen immigrants detained at Ontario correction­al facilities remain on hunger strike after more than two weeks.

Immigrant and refugee rights group No One Is Illegal says approximat­ely 50 men at the Central East Correction­al Centre in Lindsay and the Toronto East Detention Centre began refusing food on July 11, but that several have since decided to resume eating.

The organizati­on says it has been in daily contact with the detainees, who are demanding a meeting with Public Safety minister Ralph Goodale, an end to immigrants being detained in maximum security facilities and a 90-day limit on immigrant detentions in general.

Dan Brien, a spokesman for the minister, says the organizati­on is overestima­ting the number of detainees on hunger strike.

Brien said there were initially 41 detainees on hunger strike and that only two men are still refusing meals.

No One Is Illegal says it’s the bigger picture that matters.

“It’s not really about the exact numbers of people, it’s the fact that the strike is ongoing,” said Tings Chak, a spokeswoma­n for No One Is Illegal. “The demands have remained unchanged, we still have not heard back (about) a meeting with Ralph Goodale.”

Public Safety Canada says that of the 250,000 people per day who try to come to Canada, only a small minority are detained, and those cases are reviewed regularly by an independen­t tribunal.

Brien said the minister is working on “issues related to detention,” including possible alternativ­es to detention, upgrades to infrastruc­ture at detention facilities and “appropriat­e” accountabi­lity mechanisms for the Canadian Border Services Agency.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada