Toronto Star

Roma travellers report being barred from flying to Canada

Ottawa says it’s up to airlines to decide who will travel, anyone can be denied entry

- NICHOLAS KEUNG IMMIGRATIO­N REPORTER

Ottawa is being accused of preventing Roma travellers from boarding Canada-bound flights and denying them the possibilit­y of seeking asylum here.

Since the end of last year, advocates and lawyers say a slew of Roma passengers from Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia — all currently visa-exempted countries — have reported being stopped from boarding flights to Canada via transit points in Britain, Poland, Belgium and Germany.

The federal government denies that it is to blame. Ottawa says that while it provides assistance and advice to airlines, it’s ultimately up to the airlines themselves to decide who boards flights to Canada, and that all travellers coming to the country are subjected to scrutiny and can be denied entry.

Airlines found to have carried an improperly documented foreign national to Canada will be fined up to $3,200 per passenger and are liable for additional removal and medical costs, according to the government’s manual on the obligation­s of transporte­rs.

“Ninety per cent of these travellers have valid plane tickets, the electron- ic travel authorizat­ion (eTA) issued by Canada and an invitation letter from their friends and relatives in Canada,” said Toronto settlement worker Paul St. Clair, who has helped many in the community write up their invitation­s.

“The interdicti­on is happening everywhere. I have had 50 Roma families in Toronto coming to us in the last six months, asking me what to do about it, how they can help their relatives come to visit.”

While advocates including St. Clair agree that many Roma, who were once known as gypsies, may intend to come to Canada for asylum, they say Canada cannot stop legitimate refugees from travelling and accessing its asylum system if they have the proper documentat­ion to visit the country and solid grounds to support their need for Canada’s protection.

Last year, asylum-seekers from three major source countries of Roma refugees in Canada all had acceptance rates over 50 per cent — Slovakia, 74.6 per cent; Hungary, 66.9 per cent; and Czech Republic, 56.5 per cent, according to data from the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board. The overall acceptance rate for refugees to Canada was 63 per cent.

“We had people already on the plane being taken off the plane and some were stopped at checkpoint­s. They are told Canada doesn’t want them,” said Toronto immigratio­n lawyer George Kubes, who said he is aware of some 30 such cases in the past month from his former Roma clients in Toronto.

“They may end up filing a refugee claim here, but if they are real refugees, they have every right to make the claim when they get here.”

The accusation against Canadian border officials is not new. The Canadian Romani Alliance has complained about Roma travellers being denied since Canada lifted visa requiremen­ts against Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, after which asylum claims soared.

Last week, Ottawa took its first step to ease the travel requiremen­ts for Romanians and Bulgarians. Both countries have large Roma population­s.

Visitors from those two countries are now only required to obtain an eTA online, instead of a visa, if they have held a Canadian visitor visa in the past decade or currently hold a valid United States visa. The visa requiremen­t against them will be fully removed Dec. 1.

Gina Csanyi-Robah of the Canadian Romani Alliance said the problem of Roma travellers being prevented from coming to Canada seemed to have improved after media reports in 2015 highlighte­d the issue.

She wondered if the renewed reports from Roma travellers have anything to do with the planned removal of the visa requiremen­t for Bulgaria and Romania.

“Screening passengers is one big way to stop refugees from coming,”

“If they won’t need a visa to come to Canada, I won’t be surprised (if) many Roma will try to find safety here given the persecutio­n they face in those countries.” GINA CSANYI-ROBAH CANADIAN ROMANI ALLIANCE

Csanyi-Robah said. “If they won’t need a visa to come to Canada, I won’t be surprised (if ) many Roma will try to find safety here given the persecutio­n they face in those countries. It is going to be a challenge in terms of how the Canadian government is going to address the situation.”

Canada Border Services Agency spokespers­on Nicholas Dorion said the agency does not have statistics on travellers denied boarding to Canada from Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

“CBSA liaison officers provide training and advice to airlines and local authoritie­s on the documentat­ion that passengers require when travelling to Canada by air and assist with the intercepti­on of those who are improperly documented,” he said. “While the CBSA provides guidance and support to commercial transporta­tion companies to help them meet their legal obligation­s, it is ultimately the decision of the transporta­tion company to either allow the passenger to board or to deny them boarding based on the documentat­ion provided by the passenger.”

All travellers to Canada, he added, are subject to scrutiny and may still be denied boarding should their travel documentat­ion be deemed insufficie­nt, including those in possession of an electronic travel authorizat­ion.

 ?? GINA CSANYI-ROBAH ??
GINA CSANYI-ROBAH

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