Truro News

Asylum claimants up

Too early to call it a trend: officials

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Immigratio­n and border officials say it’s far too early to speculate about whether a definite increase in the number of asylum claims being made in Canada is a trend that merits a change in the way the border, or Canada’s asylum system, is managed.

Since the start of this year, 1,698 people have presented themselves at Canada-U.S. border crossings and asked for refugee protection, compared with 728 people who did so during the same time period of 2016.

Meanwhile, some 435 people have crossed illegally into Canada in places like Emerson, Man. – about the same number of illegal entrants per month as last year.

While the RCMP say they have yet to lay charges against anyone who has come across the border illegally in recent months, border officials also say most have been deemed eligible to make asylum claims. That means none can be charged with crossing illegally into Canada until after those claims are heard, a process that will take months.

Officials who hosted Thursday’s technical briefing declined to say at what point they’d consider the rising number of claimants a trend, or whether warmer

weather could increase those crossing into Canada between border points.

Here are the answers to some common questions about what’s happening at the Canada-U.S. border:

■ 1. What happens when people cross into Canada at any point other than an official border crossing?

Those intercepte­d by the RCMP or local police are arrested, then brought to the nearest Canada Border Services Agency port of entry or office or an Immigratio­n Department office. There, they are given a health assessment to assess any immediate needs, then a security screening to see if they post a security threat to Canada and whether they are eligible to make a refugee claim.

If deemed eligible to make a

claim, in most cases the person will be released while they await their refugee hearing. If they are deemed ineligible, a removal order is issued and they are released on condition they report for further removal proceeding­s.

■ 2. Are people crossing into Canada in those places breaking the law?

Both Canada’s Immigratio­n and Refugee Protection Act and the Customs Act say anyone who wants to come to Canada must present themselves at an official border point, and must also have valid documentat­ion required for the purpose of their entry or stay.

■ 3. Do they get charged? In theory, people could be charged for breaking the law. But Section 133 of the Immigratio­n and Refugee Protection Act carves out an exemption for asylum seekers.

■ 4. What’s the difference between an asylum claimant and a resettled refugee?

Resettled refugees are brought in by the government or private sponsors from abroad and arrive in Canada as permanent residents. Asylum claimants are already in Canada – or at the border – in search of refugee status.

■ 5. Can anyone make an asylum claim in Canada?

There are several circumstan­ces in which someone is prohibited make a claim for asylum in Canada. They include not being admissible to Canada on security grounds or because of criminal activity or human rights violations, or because the person has already made a claim that’s been rejected. Also, those recognized as refugees in other countries to which they could return aren’t eligible to claim status in Canada.

■ 6. What are the grounds for lodging an asylum claim?

People can be given refugee protection in Canada if they meet the United Nations definition of a Convention refugee: those with a well-founded fear of persecutio­n because of their race, religion, nationalit­y, political opinion or membership in a particular social group.

People seeking protection must show that if they return to their home country, they will face a risk of torture, death or cruel and unusual treatment or punishment.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Migrants from Somalia cross into Canada illegally from the United States early Sunday morning by walking down this train track into the town of Emerson, Man.
CP PHOTO Migrants from Somalia cross into Canada illegally from the United States early Sunday morning by walking down this train track into the town of Emerson, Man.

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