Arab News

Mexican asylum seekers set their sights north — on Canada

- AP Montreal

Pedro Meraz says living in Colima, Mexico, was like living in a war zone, with shootings, burning cars and dismembere­d bodies being left outside of schools.

When his wife Rocio Gonzalez, a 28-year-old lawyer who worked with abused women, began receiving death threats from a cartel and the local authoritie­s ignored her pleas for assistance, they knew they had to leave.

“They knew where we lived and what car we drove,” said Meraz, 41, who taught at The University of Colima, near the Pacific Coast and about 485 kilometers west of Mexico City. “Feeling that you are going to lose your life, or one of your daughters, I don’t mind starting from scratch.”

The family is part of a surge in the number of Mexicans who have requested asylum in Canada this year. Due to the relative ease of obtaining asylum in Canada compared to the US, visa-free travel between Mexico and Canada, and the threat of violence back home, more than 8,000 Mexican nationals have sought refugee status in 2022. That’s almost five times as many as last year and more than twice as many as in 2019, the last year before the COVID-19 pandemic and the travel restrictio­ns that accompanie­d it. The vast majority of them are flying in to Montreal, which has many direct flights to and from Mexico. Among them is Viviana Tapia Gonzalez, a human rights activist and mother of four from Aguascalie­ntes, about 425 kilometers

northwest of Mexico City, who said she left Mexico in January after being attacked by the military. She said her work with the families of missing and murdered women and girls made her a target.

“Death threats were constant,” she said. “I thought it was the last option I had to be safe. I work for many causes and help many people. I did not want to stop helping, but I must also protect (and) take care of myself.”

Tapia Gonzalez has been living in a Montreal women’s shelter while awaiting a decision on her asylum

claim, which she fears might get rejected.

If her claim is turned down, she wouldn’t be alone.

In the first nine months of 2022, the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board of Canada, an independen­t tribunal that investigat­es and decides asylum cases, finalized more than 2,700 claims by Mexican asylum seekers. Of those, 1,032 were accepted, 1,256 were rejected; and the remaining 400-plus were either abandoned, withdrawn, or had other outcomes, said Christian Tessier, an IRB spokespers­on.

 ?? File/AP ?? An officer informs a migrant couple of the location of a legal border station.
File/AP An officer informs a migrant couple of the location of a legal border station.

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