The Welland Tribune

Soldiers help at border

Military erects tents as temporary housing for asylum seekers

-

MORGAN LOWRIE

SAINT-BERNARD-DELACOLLE, Que. — Teams of Canadian soldiers stretched canvas across the metal frames of tents at a camp site near the Quebec-U.S. border Wednesday as they helped fellow authoritie­s cope with the crush of asylum seekers crossing into Canada.

The site, located on a flat stretch of grass behind the building where asylum claimants are bused in from the border, was expected to accommodat­e up to 500 people.

“We have about 100 personnel here on the ground who will set up 25 tents in order to house approximat­ely 500 people,” Maj. Yves Desbiens said in an interview in Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle.

“We’re going to set up lighting as well, and heating and we’re going to have flooring installed.”

The soldiers will have no role in security matters and will not participat­e in law-enforcemen­t tasks. All but a few will return to their home base once the site is completed.

Earlier in the day, in nearby Hemmingfor­d, some 40 asylum seekers sat under white tents at an impromptu reception centre that has sprung up on the Canadian side of a popular illegal border crossing.

The atmosphere appeared relaxed as border crossers lined up for lunch boxes handed out by RCMP personnel and waited to be shepherded onto buses for the 10-minute drive to the Lacolle processing station.

“I’ll be your tour guide,” one RCMP officer inside the bus could be heard joking.

“There’s the United States; this is Canada.”

Many of the hundreds of people who are crossing the CanadaUnit­ed States border into Quebec to seek asylum are of Haitian descent.

In the United States, the Trump administra­tion is considerin­g ending a program that granted Haitians so-called “temporary protected status” following the massive earthquake that struck Haiti in 2010.

Many of the arrivals are being housed in Montreal at the Olympic Stadium.

The City of Montreal said recently between 250 and 300 people were crossing the Canada-United States border to seek asylum every day, up from 50 per day in the first half of July.

On Wednesday, the Quebec government announced the opening of another facility, this one at the Royal Victoria Hospital with a capacity of between 300 and 320 places.

Francine Dupuis, who oversees a Quebec government-funded program that helps asylum seekers, said 2,620 people are currently being housed in temporary accommodat­ion in Montreal.

“As soon as people arrive (in Montreal), not only do we find them a place to stay but we make sure it’s safe, that they have the meals they need and that it’s hygienic,” Dupuis said.

“We try to keep families together.” — files from Jean Philippe Angers in Montreal

HALIFAX — A great white shark has been detected near Halifax — the second great white spotted in Nova Scotia in a month — prompting at least some people to stay out of the water.

One Twitter user joked it was “a little too close for comfort,” after a 600-kilogram tagged shark named Hilton signalled it was in Mahone Bay, a tourist town 85 kilometres south of Halifax.

Hilton — tagged by the research group Ocearch in Hilton Head, S.C., in March — signalled he was in Mahone Bay on Sunday.

“Hilton has been travelling north along the coast of southern Nova Scotia for the past week and a half,” the group said on Facebook Wednesday.

In late July, a 300-kilogram great white shark affectiona­tely known as Pumpkin was detected in Nova Scotia’s Minas Basin as she feasted on an abundance of seals.

In November, a 900-kilogram great white named Lydia — who like Hilton has her own Ocearchman­aged Twitter account — was among two tracking off Nova Scotia.

Ocearch chairman Chris Fischer has said white sharks could be using Sable Island as a place to mate.

The Atlantic White Shark Conservanc­y says the animal is the largest predatory fish in the world, with a powerful jaw full of serrated teeth and a body that can weigh up to 1,800 kilograms. But, it says the population in the North Atlantic has dropped by 75 per cent in the past 15 years and is listed by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature as vulnerable.

They have been protected from harvesting in U.S. waters since 1991, but the conservanc­y says still so little is known about where the sharks travel, pup and feed. — The Canadian Press

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada