Times Colonist

Some asylum seekers struggling to find housing after shelters

- MORGAN LOWRIE

MONTREAL — Some of the asylum seekers who have recently crossed the Canada-U.S. border say they’re struggling to find a place to live once they leave government-run temporary shelters.

Ahmed Iftikhar, 42, said he walked across the border from New York in late July with his wife and four children.

Since then, he said they’ve been moved from one temporary shelter to another: first a hotel, then the Olympic Stadium, and now a former convent in the city’s Ahuntsic-Cartiervil­le borough.

The shelters have been set up to receive the surging number of asylum seekers who have been crossing into Quebec in recent weeks, but they are only intended as temporary housing.

Asylum seekers are generally expected to leave the shelters once they receive their first social assistance cheques, but several who spoke to The Canadian Press say that’s easier said than done.

Iftikhar, who said he fled violence in Kashmir, described how he walked as far as he could in every direction looking for an apartment, but hasn’t found anything to accommodat­e his family of five.

He said authoritie­s at the shelter gave him a one-week transit pass and a list of possible addresses to check out, but so far he hasn’t had any luck.

“There is nobody to help,” he said as he watched his children play in a park near the shelter. “I want to leave here but I don’t know what to do.”

Another asylum seeker, who gave his age as 30 but did not want to give his name, said he crossed the border last week with $34 in his pocket.

He said he’s passed through 11 countries since leaving his native Haiti three years ago and decided to take a chance on a new life in Canada.

He said he’s supposed to leave the shelter and find a new place to live by Aug. 20, but without a phone he isn’t sure how to find an affordable apartment, or a lawyer to help with his asylum claim.

“Six hundred or $700 isn’t a lot to eat with, to sleep with,” he said outside a creole restaurant a block from the shelter where he’s been staying.

Between Aug. 1 and Aug. 7 alone, 1,798 people showed up at an unofficial crossing from the U.S. into Quebec.

In comparison, only 2,920 claims were filed in Quebec in all of 2015.

So far the numbers show no sign of slowing. A spokeswoma­n for the armed forces said more tents are being set up at a temporary camp near the Lacolle border station to accommodat­e people waiting for processing.

Lt. (Navy) Eliane Trahan said the camp’s capacity would more than double to 1,200 people, up from 500 last week.

Many of those coming to Canada, like 30-year-old Marie-Junie Joseph, are originally from Haiti.

In the United States, the Trump administra­tion is considerin­g ending a program that granted Haitians socalled “temporary protected status” following the massive earthquake that struck in 2010.

Joseph said the threat of deportatio­n drove her to leave North Carolina for Canada with her husband and daughter.

“I came because the door is open here, because I heard Canada is open to immigrants,” she said outside the Haitian restaurant in Montreal, her twoyear-old daughter on her lap.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Volunteer Cynthia Nelson sorts through clothes donated to help new asylum seekers at a drop-off centre in Montreal.
GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS Volunteer Cynthia Nelson sorts through clothes donated to help new asylum seekers at a drop-off centre in Montreal.
 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Asylum seekers step out of a tent to receive lunch at the Canada-United States border in Lacolle, Que.
GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS Asylum seekers step out of a tent to receive lunch at the Canada-United States border in Lacolle, Que.

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