Toronto Star

How we can help children being horrifical­ly detained

- NHUNG TUYET TRAN Nhung Tuyet Tran is an associate professor of history and the director of the Centre for Southeast Asian Studies at the University of Toronto. She arrived in the U.S. as a child refugee from Vietnam 40 years ago.

Like so many of my fellow Canadians, I have been horrified by how the United States Department of Homeland Security has since April 19 separated at least 2,000 children from their families.

We have seen the dehumaniza­tion of these children as they cower in cages facing wall-sized murals of the president’s face, bear arms with identifica­tion numbers written in lieu of personal names, and have heard their cries while border officials crack jokes about them.

These migrants have risked their lives as they walked toward the U.S. border, seeking refuge from violence and extreme poverty only to have the wealthiest and most powerful country in the world deny them basic human dignity.

It is easy to think we can relax on our summer patios, congratula­te ourselves on being compassion­ate, enlightene­d Canadians rather than cruel Americans, but that would ignore both broader truths and opportunit­ies where Canada could make a positive difference for these (and similar) refugees, but has not.

According to a study by Hannah Gros, a senior fellow at the Internatio­nal Human Rights Program at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law, the Canadian Borders and Customs Patrol detained more than 200 children between 2011 and 2015, 85 per cent of whom were under the age of 6, and many as young as 2. As we look with horror at the detention and separation of families in the United States, we must shine a light on our own policies.

In the past two years, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau inspired the world with compassion­ate words and carefully curated photos welcoming refugees while his government closes avenues through which they can seek help.

He has also quietly shut down the private sponsorshi­p program, warned refugees not to enter Canada “irregularl­y,” and he refuses to revisit the Safe Third Country Agreement.

This pact between Canada and the U.S. requires that refugee claimants make asylum applicatio­ns in the country in which they first set foot, effectivel­y allowing Canada to turn away refugees who entered through the U.S. first. The agreement made sense when both the United States and Canada shared similar policies toward the treatment of refugees, but endangers lives as those who could be offered safe haven are turned away at border crossing points. All those who have been appalled by the images and sounds they heard of crying children on the U.S.-Mexican border should call for the prime minister to address the detention of young children and the separation of families in Canada. At the same time, Canada could hold itself up as a country whose ideals enable it to be a beacon of hope for those in distress.

The government of Pierre Trudeau, Justin’s father, changed immigratio­n policy so 40,000 men, mostly of white, educated background­s, could avoid the U.S. military draft by immigratin­g and settling in Canada. Were these young men any more at risk than the poor children who are fleeing one nightmare only to be put in detention and separated from their parents?

On World Refugee Day, I ask Prime Minister Trudeau and my fellow Canadians whether the lives of black and brown bodies seeking refuge from war, dehumaniza­tion, and state-sponsored violence south of the border and in our own country are as important as those of the young men who sought safe haven a generation ago?

If the answer is yes, then we must end the detention of children at immigratio­n holding centres in Canada, rescind the Safe Third Country Agreement, and revisit the government’s resettleme­nt policies, which often leave the most vulnerable refugees behind. This is a nonpartisa­n issue, but if Trudeau refuses to deal with it , perhaps it is time for courageous members of Parliament from his own party to take a stand. The world is watching and history will judge how we act in response to this humanitari­an crisis, not by our words alone.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Christophe­r Baker, 3, participat­es in a protest in Olympia, Wash., against the Trump administra­tion’s anti-migrant policies.
TED S. WARREN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Christophe­r Baker, 3, participat­es in a protest in Olympia, Wash., against the Trump administra­tion’s anti-migrant policies.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada