Refugee acceptance rate has jumped in 4 years
Canada’s refugee acceptance rate shot up drastically, with two out of three claims granted asylum last year, according to latest data from the Immigration and Refugee Board.
In total, adjudicators made 5,414 positive decisions and rejected 2,732 claims out of 9,171 decisions made, the rest were either abandoned or withdrawn by the claimants.
The 2016 refugee acceptance rate, at 66.1 per cent, has been the highest since the revamp of the asylum processing system by the former Conservative government in 2012.
It surpassed the rates in the previous years — 38.1per cent in 2013, 38.8 in 2014 and 45.5 per cent in 2015.
Unlike previous years, when some decision-makers actually rejected every single case they heard, the latest figures showed none of the board’s100 or so refugee judges had a zero acceptance rate in the past year.
“The positive news is the consistency of decision-making is improving. It reflects the professionalization of the decision makers from (government) appointees to civil servants,” said Osgoode Hall Law School professor Sean Rehaag, who obtained the data.
The refugee board data showed one-third of the asylum refusals un- der appeals at the appeal tribunal were successful, said Rehaag, suggesting wrong decisions continued to be made despite the merits of the claims.
Some countries that are designated as “safe” in Canada’s refugee system for fast-tracking also produced many positive refugee decisions.
Hungary, for example, had a 66.9per-cent acceptance rate, with 529 individuals, predominantly Roma minorities, granted asylum in 2016.
Claimants from all six countries under U.S. President Donald Trump’s travel and refugee bans announced Monday also enjoyed above-average success.
Eighty per cent of Iranian refugees were granted asylum; 89 per cent for Libyans; 71.6 per cent for Somalis; 72.7 per cent for Sudanese; 97.2 per cent for Syrians and 92.5 Yemenis.