Montreal Gazette

Government eases rules on refugees

Syrians will no longer need UN refugee status before applying

- BRUCE CHEADLE

The Conservati­ve government says it will speed up the processing of Syrian refugee applicatio­ns in an effort to issue “thousands more” visas before the end of this year.

Syrians fleeing the civil war and sectarian conflict will no longer have to prove they are convention refugees under the United Nations Refugee Agency but will be presumed to be refugees by Canadian authoritie­s for the purposes of vetting their applicatio­ns.

The government will also put more diplomats on the ground overseas to screen refugees, more than double the number of staff working to process sponsorshi­p applicatio­ns here in Canada, and appoint a special co-ordinator to handle the overall file of Syrian and Iraqi refugees.

“Security screening will remain the top priority,” Chris Alexander, the minister of citizenshi­p and immigratio­n, said Saturday at a news conference in east Toronto where he’s campaignin­g for re-election on Oct. 19.

Alexander stressed that the government is “accelerati­ng our existing commitment” to refugee resettleme­nt, not increasing the actual target numbers.

But the new measures, which are expected to cost $25 million over two years, could speed up the movement of 10,000 Syrian refugees to Canada from the current three-year timetable by about 15 months, he said.

A campaignin­g Conservati­ve Leader Stephen Harper has also proposed to bring in an additional 10,000 Syrian refugees if re-elected.

The humanitari­an crisis spreading from Syria into Europe has side-swiped the election campaign and put Harper’s Conservati­ve government on the defensive ever since it emerged that the extended family of a drowned Syrian toddler aspired to come to Canada.

The aunt of dead three-yearold Alan Kurdi, whose photo galvanized internatio­nal attention, lives in the Vancouver area and had failed in a refugee sponsorshi­p bid for the young boy’s uncle earlier this year.

One of the roadblocks to the Kurdi family’s reunificat­ion was their lack of convention refugee status from the overwhelme­d UN body.

That hurdle, which the Conservati­ves imposed in a previous round of refugee reforms, has been removed.

“We did not make up this plan on the back of a napkin or pull it out of thin air,” said Alexander.

“We looked carefully at our capacity. We looked carefully at the steps and procedures to keep Canada and Canadians safe. And we’ve come up with a much accelerate­d plan that will bring 10,000 Syrian refugees here by September 2016.”

Harper, NDP Leader Tom Mulcair and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau were back out on the campaign trail Sunday after a down day Saturday to regroup.

Opposition parties who have been clamouring for faster government handling of the Syrian refugee crisis — and for accepting increased numbers of refugees — gave only grudging approval.

While Canadians, from individual sponsors to city mayors and provincial premiers, have been acting, Harper has been stonewalli­ng, Liberal candidate John McCallum said in a release.

“Today he recognized that the Conservati­ve government’s policies were failing,” said the Liberal. “He has refused to provide leadership on this issue, continuall­y hiding behind fear mongering and bureaucrat­ic roadblocks.”

NDP candidate Paul Dewar said the government was not moving fast enough.

“The appointmen­t of a Syrian Refugee Coordinato­r is an important step in speeding up the arrival of refugees here in Canada, but we don’t have to wait any longer,” Dewar said in a statement. “We could meet this initial commitment of 10,000 by the end of this year.” He added the NDP would accept another 9,000 per year in coming years.

“We would lift the cap on private sponsorshi­ps, eliminate quotas and bureaucrat­ic obstacles, and treat refugees equally.”

Earlier Saturday, Harper announced in a press release that a reelected Conservati­ve government would create something called a “Maple Leaf” designatio­n, to be awarded to no more than five to seven individual­s per year.

The release from the prime minister says new Canadians are great ambassador­s, while noting that one in five Canadians — 6.8 million — are foreign born.

Harper created something of a social media storm during an election leaders’ debate Thursday in Calgary when he referred to “old stock” Canadians while defending his government’s cuts to refugee health care. New Democrats and Liberals jumped on the comment, alleging Harper was dividing Canadians by suggesting citizens can be characteri­zed in separate categories.

“We’re lucky to have millions of people who come to Canada to build a new life and also maintain close ties with their birth country,” Harper said in Saturday’s news release.

The Conservati­ve party said in a background release that recipients of the proposed award must have “a track record of promoting strong links between Canada and their home country as exemplifie­d by business investment, arts and cultural exchanges, and internatio­nal developmen­t work.”

 ?? PETROS GIANNAKOUR­IS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Syrian woman and her child arrive on the Greek island of Lesbos from Turkey on Saturday. The Conservati­ve government says Syrians fleeing conflict will be presumed to be refugees by Canadian authoritie­s for the purposes of vetting their applicatio­ns.
PETROS GIANNAKOUR­IS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Syrian woman and her child arrive on the Greek island of Lesbos from Turkey on Saturday. The Conservati­ve government says Syrians fleeing conflict will be presumed to be refugees by Canadian authoritie­s for the purposes of vetting their applicatio­ns.

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