The Sunday Guardian

Canada using DNA to probe migrants

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OTTAWA: Canadian immigratio­n officials are using DNA testing and ancestry websites to try to establish the nationalit­y of migrants, the Canada Border Services Agency said on Friday.

CBSA spokesman Jayden Robertson said the agency uses DNA testing to determine identity of “longer-term detainees” when other techniques have been exhausted.

“DNA testing assists the CBSA in determinin­g identity by providing indicators of nationalit­y thereby enabling us to focus further lines of investigat­ion on particular countries,” Robertson said in an email. But the process raises concerns about privacy of data held by ancestry websites, and highlights political pressure over the handling of migrants by Canada’s Liberal government. More than 30,000 would-be refugees have crossed the US-Canada border since January 2017, many saying they were fleeing US President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies.

A VICE News report on Thursday quoted an immigratio­n lawyer whose client is being investigat­ed by the CBSA using DNA and the ancestry database FamilyTree­DNA.com. In that case, the Canadian authoritie­s were trying to deport a migrant who said he was from Liberia, speculatin­g he was instead from Nigeria based on DNA testing and a linguistic­s report.

FamilyTree­DNA said in an email that it does not work directly with Canadian law enforcemen­t and has “no knowledge of Canadian law enforcemen­t or its border agency using the FTDNA platform for the purpose of gathering migrant DNA to determine nationalit­y.” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has vowed to find alternativ­es to the indefinite incarcerat­ion of noncitizen­s, who can be held without being charged if they are deemed a flight risk, a danger to the public or if their identity is unclear, according to Canada’s regulation­s.

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