Los Angeles Times

U.S. border policy roils Canada

Neighborin­g nation debates response to Trump, whose moves have left it inundated with asylum seekers

- By Vera Haller Haller is a special correspond­ent.

Nation debates response to Trump amid surge in asylum claims.

MONTREAL — Gbolahan Banjo says his bisexualit­y led to ostracism and beatings in his native Nigeria, where same-sex relationsh­ips are forbidden. So in early June, he made his way to a deserted road in upstate New York and walked across the border and into Canada.

“I was tired of running for my life,” the 48-year-old said 11 days later as he waited to speak to an immigratio­n lawyer in Montreal about his request for asylum protection.

After arriving in the U.S. on a tourist visa in December and recovering in Newark, N.J., from the beatings he’d endured, Banjo traveled a well-worn route for asylum seekers, many of whom arrive in the U.S. but see no hope of refuge since President Trump began hardening the country’s borders.

Now those get-tough policies are affecting Canada’s long-standing and smooth-functionin­g immigratio­n system, which has taken on thousands of new asylum requests.

The policies also have ignited a heated debate between those seeking tighter border controls and others who want the Canadian government to stand up to Trump’s immigratio­n moves.

Andrew Scheer, leader of the opposition Conservati­ve Party, sent a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau this month demanding that the government stop the “queue jumping” by asylum seekers such as Banjo, who enter Canada at unofficial crossings.

Jean-Francois Lisee, leader of the separatist Parti Quebecois, in April floated the idea that Canada erect a fence on the its side of Roxham Road in upstate New York where Banjo and thousands of other asylum seekers have entered Canada. Lisee later backpedale­d a bit, saying he envisioned more of a plant hedge than the massive wall Trump wants to build along the Mexican border.

But pressure also has mounted on the government to rethink, and possibly abandon, a bilateral agreement that for 14 years has enshrined the principle that the U.S. and Canada share similar standards when deciding asylum requests. The Safe Third Country Agreement requires that people seek asylum in the first country they enter — either the U.S. or Canada — under the premise they’ll be treated the same at either border.

But Trump’s “zero tolerance” approach at the border has changed that.

“Trump policies that separated children from their families at the Mexican border has added to a real sense of unease and opposition to the agreement we have with the U.S.,” said Lloyd Axworthy, chair of the World Refugee Council at Canada’s Center for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation and a former foreign minister.

Axworthy has joined a growing chorus demanding that the government suspend the agreement. They argue that U.S. policies, including no longer providing asylum in cases of domestic and gang violence, are out of sync with Canadian policies in practical, and even ethical, terms.

The agreement states that asylum seekers who first land in one country can be turned back at an official border crossing of the other. A loophole allows immigrants such as Banjo to enter Canada at unofficial crossings and then claim refugee status.

Two days before Trump signed an executive order stopping future family separation­s, Jenny Kwan of the New Democratic Party made an emotional plea in Parliament for the suspension of the Safe Third Country Agreement because of the shifts in U.S. immigratio­n policy.

“These practices are blatant violations of internatio­nal law,” Kwan said. “If Canada doesn’t step up, then we are complicit.”

Trudeau called the Trump family separation­s “wrong” while his immigratio­n minister, Ahmed Hussen, said the government was monitoring the situation in the U.S., adding, “We will continue to be a country that is open to refugees and protected persons.”

The immigratio­n debate comes at a time of worsening U.S.-Canada relations and the relationsh­ip between the two leaders has been tense since a summit of Group of 7 leaders in Quebec in early June when Trump called Trudeau weak and refused to sign a joint agreement on economic and foreign policy goals.

“Canceling or reopening the Safe Third Country Agreement would become another irritant in already tense negotiatio­ns,” said Mireille Paquet, a professor of political science at Concordia University in Montreal, who studies the politics of immigratio­n.

Paquet and other political observers believe Canada will not make any moves soon regarding the agreement, especially while facing difficult negotiatio­ns with the U.S. on the North American Free Trade Agreement and tariffs.

Conservati­ve members of Parliament, meanwhile, have stepped up demands for tighter border controls.

They would like the government to close the loophole in the Safe Third Country Agreement by declaring the entire length of the border an official entry point, allowing authoritie­s to turn back asylum seekers who simply walk into Canada. Critics, though, say it would be impossible to police the entire length of the border and could encourage human traffickin­g.

According to official immigratio­n targets set by the government, Canada will approve 310,000 new permanent residents in 2018, with 177,500 chosen through a point system for job skills and education levels and the rest divided between family reunificat­ions and refugees.

Throwing a wrench into the system are the unexpected arrivals, such as Banjo.

From January through May of this year, Royal Canadian Mounted Police intercepte­d 9,481 people entering the country at unofficial crossings along the U.S. border. Last year, more than 20,000 asylum seekers came into Canada outside the official system, government statistics showed.

Although some of the pressure on services has eased since the first wave of asylum seekers last summer forced the government to provide temporary housing in Montreal’s Olympic Stadium, agencies working with immigrants here continue to juggle increased demands.

CACI, a nonprofit center for immigrants in Montreal, offers French classes and job search support to immigrants granted permanent residence though the official system, but has seen demand for its services to asylum seekers increase dramatical­ly in the last year, according to its executive director, Anait Aleksanian.

As many as 20 newly arrived asylum seekers show up at its offices each day, she said. Employees help them with applicatio­ns for work permits and enrolling children in school. Some receive rations from the center’s food bank.

Banjo, the Nigerian asylum seeker, is living in a YMCA shelter in Montreal. His asylum request won’t be heard until March. So he waits.

“Hope is the last thing people keep,” he said.

‘These practices are blatant violations of internatio­nal law. If Canada doesn’t step up, then we are complicit.’ — Jenny Kwan, Canadian politician denouncing President Trump’s immigratio­n policies

 ?? Photograph­s by Vera Haller For The Times ?? VOLUNTEERS at CACI, a nonprofit in Montreal, unload supplies for a food bank that serves newly arrived asylum seekers. The nonprofit has seen demand for its services increase dramatical­ly in the last year.
Photograph­s by Vera Haller For The Times VOLUNTEERS at CACI, a nonprofit in Montreal, unload supplies for a food bank that serves newly arrived asylum seekers. The nonprofit has seen demand for its services increase dramatical­ly in the last year.
 ??  ?? FEARING for his life because he is bisexual, Gbolahan Banjo f led Nigeria for the U.S., but President Trump’s policies drove him to seek asylum in Canada instead.
FEARING for his life because he is bisexual, Gbolahan Banjo f led Nigeria for the U.S., but President Trump’s policies drove him to seek asylum in Canada instead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States