Taranaki Daily News

Border camp swells with asylum seekers from US

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CANADA: Dozens of army tents dotted the Canadian border yesterday to house hundreds of asylum seekers, many from Haiti, streaming into the country from upstate New York to file refugee claims.

More than 200 people a day are illegally walking across the border into Quebec to seek asylum, government officials said. Over 4300 asylum seekers have crossed illegally into Canada in the first half of this year, with some citing US President Donald Trump’s tougher stance on immigratio­n.

Canada’s military has set up heated tents to house up to 500 asylum seekers as they undergo security screenings near the border. Officers from the Canada Bor- der Services Agency and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police have also been redeployed to the area to provide additional assistance as authoritie­s grapple with the influx.

The claimants, once they have crossed the border illegally, are brought by buses to the makeshift camp where their belongings are kept in shipping containers.

About 25 asylum seekers, predominan­tly men, occupied some of the tents on the temporary encampment on Thursday afternoon. They lay on cots, charged their phones and sat at wooden picnic benches in a light drizzle.

Most of the recent arrivals have been Haitians, officials say, who fear they will be deported from the US as their ‘‘temporary protected status,’’ which granted more than 50,000 Haitians residency in the U.S. after the 2010 earthquake, is set to expire in January. Spurred by false accounts of guaranteed residency in Canada, they made for the border. Wilfrid Guillaume, 36, left Haiti three months ago and applied for asylum in the United States. Guillaume, who occupied one of the tents, said he abandoned his claim because he felt his chances were poor. He walked to Canada, he said, ‘‘where we’ll be welcomed.’’

Canada ended its own ban on deportatio­ns to Haiti last year and has deported 100 Haitians in 2016 and 318 since March alone, according to government data. Last year, 50.5 per cent of Haitian refugee claimants were successful, compared to about 62 per cent of all claimants, according to government data. Once processed, asylum seekers are put on buses to Montreal, the largest city in Canada’s mainly French-speaking Quebec province, which has opened its Olympic Stadium, a former hospital, a school, and other places to house people.

Asylum seekers are crossing the border illegally because a loophole in a US pact allows them to file claims and stay in Canada while they await the outcome.

- Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Refugees stand outside one of the tents set up to house the influx of asylum seekers by the Canadian Armed Forces near the border in Lacolle, Quebec.
PHOTO: REUTERS Refugees stand outside one of the tents set up to house the influx of asylum seekers by the Canadian Armed Forces near the border in Lacolle, Quebec.

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