Times Colonist

Canadian officials brace for spike in illegal border crossing

- TERESA WRIGHT

OTTAWA — Border officials are preparing for another spike in asylum seekers coming illegally into Canada from the U.S. as the weather gets warmer.

The RCMP intercepte­d more than 3,000 irregular border-crossers in January and February, part of a total number of 7,800 asylum seekers processed by the federal immigratio­n department and the Canada Border Services Agency during the same time period.

Those figures don’t include more than 600 people who entered the country illegally through Quebec over the Easter weekend.

Officials are expecting those numbers to continue to grow as temperatur­es rise. Immigratio­n and CBSA officials have been preparing for the influx after getting caught flat-footed last summer dealing with an unexpected surge in mainly Haitian migrants entering Canada through Ontario and Quebec.

“Canada is an open and welcoming country to those in need of protection, but our government is committed to orderly migration to protect Canadians and our immigratio­n system. Our government is prepared for any future fluctuatio­ns,” said Mathieu Genest, press secretary for Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen.

Many of the most recent migrants crossing illegally into Canada are Nigerian, which suggests word-of-mouth about Canada as a safe haven for asylum seekers has continued to spread despite Canadian efforts to counter it. Several Liberal MPs headed south last year in an effort to warn would-be travellers against making the trip.

In any event, if more migrants continue to arrive, border officials will be ready, Genest said Friday. “We have worked with various department­s, provinces and settlement organizati­ons to develop a national operations plan to manage possible scenarios at the border.”

The federal government has also committed $74 million to help address lengthy backlogs in processing refugee claims at the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board. The department has also cut workpermit wait times for asylum seekers from three months to three weeks and issued more than 12,000 work permits to asylum seekers in Quebec.

But the Canadian Council for Refugees said it is concerned about vulnerable migrants being exploited by scammers who offer to help them cross the border for a hefty fee.

“People pay up large amounts of money, get to Canada, find out that they’re making a refugee claim … and find out they’ve been lied to by the scammers,” said executive director Janet Dench. “That sort of thing happens quite regularly.”

The council has been calling for the government to suspend the Canada-U.S. Safe Third Country Agreement, which has been cited as a major factor in the spike of irregular border crossings.

The agreement makes it impossible for would-be refugees arriving from the U.S. to claim asylum at an official port of entry to Canada. They can only make such a claim from inside the country, prompting thousands to make the crossing on foot through unofficial entry points.

Suspending the agreement would all but eliminate irregular crossings and make migrant refugees less vulnerable to scammers, Dench said.

“There’s this whole charade that people have to go through in order to make a claim in Canada, which would be completely unnecessar­y if Canada would simply say, ‘We will suspend the safe third country agreement.’ ”

 ??  ?? Asylum seekers line up to enter Montreal’s Olympic Stadium last August, when it was used temporaril­y to house an unexpected surge of people who had crossed the U.S. border into Quebec.
Asylum seekers line up to enter Montreal’s Olympic Stadium last August, when it was used temporaril­y to house an unexpected surge of people who had crossed the U.S. border into Quebec.

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