Times Colonist

Manitoba in talks with feds about refugee crossings

- STEVE LAMBERT

WINNIPEG — Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister said his government has been talking with the Prime Minister’s Office about ways to deal with the rising number of refugees illicitly crossing the border from the United States.

Pallister’s words came soon after RCMP intercepte­d another seven people near Emerson, Man. — one of the hotspots in Canada that has seen a surge in people fleeing a potential crackdown on immigrants south of the border.

“There has been a call to the prime minister on this issue. A number of options are being discussed,” Pallister said Monday. “My first concern is for the security of Manitobans, but I’m also, of course, concerned for the people seeking refuge.”

The number of people braving the elements to cross the border through remote fields has jumped in recent months in Manitoba, Quebec and British Columbia, RCMP said. At Emerson, 21 people were arrested over the weekend. Another 22 were apprehende­d the previous weekend.

Many of the asylum-seekers are originally from African countries, have been living in the U.S., and are worried about that government’s plans to tighten immigratio­n rules.

They avoid official border crossings because under the Safe Third Country Agreement, Canada is required to turn back any refugees who first claimed asylum in the U.S. The agreement does not apply to people who manage to get onto Canadian soil first, so the refugees risk freezing temperatur­es to walk across unguarded stretches of the border and turn themselves into police or area residents.

The Manitoba Interfaith Immigratio­n Council, which provides temporary shelter and other help for refugees, is serving about six times the average number of people this year. Its 15-person housing unit was full Monday, prompting the group to launch a fundraisin­g appeal and seek available beds at other social agencies.

The group’s executive director, Rita Chahal, said those crossing the border are desperate and facing hazardous winter conditions.

“I held a six-month-old baby on Saturday, and looked into the eyes of a two-year-old and a fouryear-old, who had trekked with their parents for six hours,” she said. “I’m glad to say that the children are safe and so are the parents.”

Seidu Mohammed was denied asylum in the U.S., but his fear of being deported to his native Ghana, where he believes he’d be killed or jailed for being bisexual, became so great that he set out in brutal winter conditions to cross into Canada.

Mohammed and his friend Razak Iyal lost all their fingers to frostbite after a 10-hour trek across fields of waist-high snow in sub-zero temperatur­es. Despite their injuries, the two men say they now feel safe. “God blessed Canada with good people,” said Mohammed, 24. “I see the difference between Canada and the United States.”

Iyal, also a Ghana national, said he wants to bring his wife to Canada. “We feel like we are home,” Iyal said. “We feel we are a part of Canada. They were talking to us with respect.”

 ?? CP ?? A sign near Emerson, Man,, where dozens of refugees have been crossing into Canada.
CP A sign near Emerson, Man,, where dozens of refugees have been crossing into Canada.

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