Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

Justin Trudeau and Joe Biden are missing the bigger picture about migrant border crossings

- BY LAURA MADOKORO, Carleton University

When Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and United States President Joe Biden announced unofficial border crossings were no longer exempt from the Safe Third Country Agreement — meaning migrants could be turned away — news reports documented the surprise and dismay of those who arrived at Roxham Road in Québec, a few hours past the deadline of midnight, March 25, 2023.

Migrants who crossed just hours before the new measures took effect, on the other hand, expressed relief to the media that they made it into Canada in time.

The media attention on these most recent attempts to cross the Canada-U.S. border helps the public understand what otherwise too often takes place on isolated rural roads and with little accountabi­lity. They shed some light on what is happening, but only some.

The issues at play at Roxham Road, on the Québec-New York border, are larger than any one single border crossing, official or otherwise. They are intimately connected to global political instabilit­y, economic equities, exploitati­on and the enduring question of a state’s capacity to be humanitari­an when it is also in the business of managing migration.

Shining a spotlight

The need to see beyond the immediate crossing point is urgent and necessary, because the modified Safe Third Country Agreement is not the end of the story.

Raising public awareness about the issues surroundin­g migration has been a critical part of civil society activism on refugee issues in recent years.

It was a cornerston­e of the 1980s sanctuary movement,

when there were animated debates about the nature of responsibi­lities to refugees in the United States and, to some extent, in Canada.

In March 1982, the Southside Presbyteri­an Church in Tucson, Ariz., alongside five churches from the San Francisco Bay area, declared themselves public sanctuarie­s for migrants from Central America who were fleeing civil wars and political persecutio­n.

The Ronald Reagan administra­tion, which funded guerrilla movements in Nicaragua, Guatemala and El Salvador, had made it difficult for people to file asylum claims — and the few that were heard were disproport­ionately refused.

For instance, only three per cent of claims from El Salvador were accepted, despite testimony from refugees about brutal persecutio­n that was echoed by human rights observers. The speed of the refusals and the deportatio­ns made it difficult for people to learn about the circumstan­ces that had caused people to flee.

As civil society activists began to educate themselves about what was going on in Central America, they recognized that U.S. foreign policy was contrib

uting to the conflicts that were fuelling migration.

They connected the dots and argued that the U.S. government’s failure to address asylum claims from Central Americans in a fair and just manner was part of a larger strategy of refusing responsibi­lity for the tumult in the region.

‘Civil initiative’

To address the situation, civil society organizati­ons began to collaborat­e on multiple levels in what Jim Corbett, a Quaker and Arizona rancher who was deeply involved in the movement, described as “civil initiative.”

This involved everything from helping people across the Mexico–U.S. border to offering legal advice and support, facilitati­ng or providing translatio­n services, and advocating publicly on behalf of refugees.

Alongside public declaratio­ns of sanctuary, Corbett talked about “public witness” as a “key dimension of efforts to end the persecutio­n” (detailed in Miriam Davidson’s Conviction­s of the Heart: Jim Corbett and the Sanctuary Movement).

Crucially, some refugees in sanctuary chose or were invited to speak about their experience­s. They often described their own circumstan­ces. However, they also talked about the conditions in their homelands, and raised awareness about violent conflicts that might not have been as well understood otherwise.

Authoritie­s recognized how powerful — and damning — this informatio­n was.

During the 1985 sanctuary trial — in which 11 members of the sanctuary movement were tried for various felonies including smuggling and transporta­tion — the ruling judge specifical­ly denied the introducti­on of any foreign policy evidence or testimony about events in people’s homelands as part of the proceeding­s. Six of the activists, including Corbett, were convicted, though all received probation.

The judge’s actions illustrate­s the importance of the larger story when it comes to migration issues.

What fuels migration?

The current discussion­s of migration across the Canada–U.S. border, in both directions, are focused only on the movement of migrants themselves, with little sense or interest in the circumstan­ces that are causing people to move.

In other words, we are only seeing migrants, not the bigger picture.

Take for example, the situation in Venezuela, described by the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees as one of the largest displaceme­nt crises in the world.

There are currently an estimated seven million Venezuelan migrants and refugees abroad as a result of the turbulent economic and political conditions in the country.

The United States government has suspended direct flights to Venezuela, as has the Canadian government.

There is also a Canadian travel advisory telling people to “avoid all travel to Venezuela due to the significan­t level of violent crime, the unstable political and economic situations and the decline in basic living conditions, including shortages of medication, gasoline and water.”

Let’s not impose further burdens

Having a sense of the larger picture isn’t about the merits of individual claims, or how people decide to seek better lives, or what borders they crossed.

It’s about having a better understand­ing of how and why people all over the world are moving.

As the public education component of the 1980s sanctuary movement shows, this is work all of us can do. As people lose the capacity to be heard, the burden falls on all of us to understand circumstan­ces abroad rather than to make assumption­s about who people are, and what they may or may not have endured, based solely on how they are moving.

If we’re going to have robust and substantiv­e conversati­ons about migration policy and humanitari­an responsibi­lities, then we need to zoom out — beyond the immediacy of the border — to better understand the interconne­cted circumstan­ces that

 ?? (JUSTIN TRUDEAU/FACEBOOK) ?? Canadaian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and United States President Joe Biden
(JUSTIN TRUDEAU/FACEBOOK) Canadaian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and United States President Joe Biden

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