The Peterborough Examiner

Manitoba sets up reception centre for asylum-seeking border crossers

-

GRETNA, Man. — The Manitoba government is transformi­ng a former seniors residence into a reception centre for asylum-seekers who walk across the border.

The centre is being set up in Gretna, Man., an official border crossing close to Emerson where refugee claimants have been walking through fields to reach Canada from the United States.

The province says the centre will provide short-term shelter, food and help with the necessary refugee claimant paperwork.

In an e-mailed statement, the government says it expects up to 60 people could be housed in the vacant building.

It says the vast majority of asylum-seekers will be moved to Winnipeg within days.

A few hundred people have walked across open fields and through ditches into Manitoba since Jan. 1.

Many of them are originally from African nations and fear deportatio­n from the United States under toughened immigratio­n laws.

They cross unofficial­ly instead of at border posts because of the Canada-U.S. Safe Third Country agreement. Under that agreement, people who have made refugee claims first in the U.S. are turned back at official Canadian entry points, but it does not apply if they manage to get onto Canadian soil some other way.

The government is emphasizin­g that no one is being displaced from the centre and are telling residents the asylum-seekers don’t pose a security threat.

“The processes put in place by Canada Border Services Agency are rigorous. The screening at the border is extensive, and individual­s whose identities can’t be establishe­d, or who have a history of violence, are detained at the border,” states a government questionan­d-answer pamphlet for area residents.

“In the experience of the settlement service providers, there has been no reason to believe asylumseek­ers are a specific risk to the community. The individual­s and families who come to make a refugee claim do so in order to make a better life for themselves, and are not coming to cause trouble.

“They are seeking safety and security in Canada.”

The centre is expected to start receiving refugee claimants this month but it’s not a “long-term sustainabl­e strategy.

“It is our hope that by opening up the facility in Gretna, and staffing it with provincial staff, we will be able to gather better data, and improve the predictabi­lity of the flow of asylum-seekers into Winnipeg,” the government pamphlet says. “This will help us determine our longterm plan.”

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Eight migrants from Somalia cross into Canada illegally in February from the United States by walking down this train track into the town of Emerson, Man., where they will seek asylum at Canada Border Services Agency.
CANADIAN PRESS FILES Eight migrants from Somalia cross into Canada illegally in February from the United States by walking down this train track into the town of Emerson, Man., where they will seek asylum at Canada Border Services Agency.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada