The Province

Fear of Trump fuels flight to Canada

Fearing deportatio­ns arising from U.S. anti-immigratio­n politics, Haitians march to the border

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D THE CANADIAN PRESS

CORNWALL, Ont. — Their lives changed in an instant that July day when the government letter arrived telling them that her work permit wasn’t being renewed.

For five years, Sheila François lived, worked and paid her taxes in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to help support her three teen children. When she and husband Frank read that letter — no renewal and no explanatio­n — they knew their life in the United States was over.

“If you have status and you see that immigratio­n stops it, right away you think one thing — deportatio­ns,” says 44-year-old Frank François.

“The minute we saw that happen and as we are watching the news, we saw Canada taking people, we said, ‘we might as well take a chance’. ”

The François family is among nearly 7,000 asylum seekers — most of them Haitian — who have flooded across the Quebec-New York state border since mid-July when the Trump administra­tion announced it might end their “temporary protected status” which was granted following Haiti’s massive 2010 earthquake. They are among the first few hundred the government has relocated to this eastern Ontario processing centre.

Few here have heard of Justin Trudeau and no one says they saw his now controvers­ial January Twitter message welcoming immigrants facing persecutio­n. The tweet was heavily criticized by the Conservati­ve opposition for sparking the American exodus.

But many here say they uprooted their new American lives because of something more primal: they were driven by fear of the anti-immigratio­n politics of President Donald Trump.

“I decided to come to Canada because the politics of migration in the United States changed,” says Haitian-born Justin Remy Napoleon, 39. “I was scared. I came here to continue my life.”

Like Frank François, Napoleon says he feared deportatio­n over Trump’s policy shift, so he left his adopted home in San Diego, flew to the eastern seaboard and boarded a bus for the northern border. It wasn’t the first time he decided to start over in another country. He left Haiti in 2006 for the Dominican Republic and then went to Brazil.

Napoleon says he dreamed of coming to Canada from as far back as his time in Haiti. When he crossed the border earlier this month, “I thought I was entering a paradise.”

Jean-Pierre Kidmage, 43, took a three-day bus ride from Miami to New York before taking a taxi across the border. He says he doesn’t know much about Canada but he’s heard good things. He hit the road because he was worried the Trump administra­tion would deport him.

He’s been here less than two weeks, but he wants to stay.

Lingering unease is palpable outside Cornwall’s Nav Centre, where they’re being temporaril­y housed. Young men and women, some with children, pace the grounds, their eyes trained on mobile phones. More than a dozen adults politely decline interviews.

Some await taxis to take them into town to shop. A few roll suitcases towards a handful of cars and minivans bearing Quebec licence plates that periodical­ly arrive during the day. The new arrivals here are free to go once they have registered their claims and officials say most are headed to Montreal.

Now, more than a month and 2,550 kilometres after leaving his most recent home, Frank François has lived a life of running — from his native Haiti in 1997 to the Bahamas and from America to Canada.

Most recently he was living with his family in Fort Lauderdale, near Miami.

He says his three children have become extremely aware of the changing political climate in the U.S.

“They said, ‘Daddy, let’s go to Canada — find our way out’.”

Now, his family’s fate rests on receiving official government correspond­ence telling them they qualify to have their asylum claim heard. That would start a process that will allow his children to go to school and for him to get a work permit.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? A family marches along Roxham Road near Champlain, N.Y. toward the Canada/U.S. border. Nearly 7,000 asylum seekers have flooded across the Quebec-New York border since mid-July.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES A family marches along Roxham Road near Champlain, N.Y. toward the Canada/U.S. border. Nearly 7,000 asylum seekers have flooded across the Quebec-New York border since mid-July.

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