Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Political shift imperils Canada regularizi­ng undocument­ed migrants

-

THOUSANDS of undocument­ed migrants in Canada were promised a major regulariza­tion program by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, only to have their dreams of residency jeopardize­d by a shift in political winds just a few months later.

“I had a lot of hope but now I don’t know what to think. It’s very hard,” Nina, a Colombian migrant to the country, told AFP.

The 50-year-old landed in Canada with her young daughter in 2008. “Here, I found peace. I was fleeing the violence of my country and family violence,” she said.

But then, in 2015, she was asked to leave Canada.

“I wanted to kill myself. I don’t know how I will cope with all this. My daughter has become Canadian, my life is here,” she said, struggling to keep her emotions in check.

The government’s latest statements have created confusion among undocument­ed migrants and the associatio­ns that support them, after years of regulariza­tion talks with officials.

There are between 100,000 and 1 million undocument­ed migrants in Canada, like Nina, according to different estimates.

Immigratio­n Minister Marc Miller continues to promise in the coming months an “ambitious” program for people who have been in the country “sometimes for years with children who grew up here.”

But, he told Agence France-Presse (AFP), it “won’t be for everyone.”

Canada is no longer “exempt from the toxic rhetoric on immigratio­n that is affecting all Western countries,” he lamented.

According to the last census in 2021, 23% of the population was foreign-born.

Polls, however, have shown a discernibl­e shift in public opinion on immigratio­n.

After years of broad support for Canada’s open immigratio­n policy, Abacus Data found that 67% of recent respondent­s considered immigratio­n levels in Canada to be either too high or much too high.

Meanwhile, only 24% believed that the current level of immigratio­n contribute­s positively to the country.

“It would be going too far to say that there’s been an anti-immigrant turn in Canada,” says Andrew McDougall, a political scientist at the University of Toronto.

“I think what has started to happen is there’s been more questions raised about how immigratio­n is being done.”

At the start of 2024, Canada’s population surpassed 41 million thanks to strong immigratio­n encouraged in order to help ease a labor crunch.

But support waned as the record number of arrivals compounded a housing crisis and strained health care and other social services.

In response, the government toughened its tone, announcing that Canada for the first time in its history would reduce the number of temporary foreign workers as well as foreign students.

Associatio­ns fear undocument­ed migrants now risk becoming “history’s forgotten ones.”

“We are not giving ourselves the means to reform the system or to implement something that will help get these people out of the violence, harassment and exploitati­on that they endure every day,” said Carole Yerochewsk­i of the Center for Immigrant Workers.

 ?? ?? Haitian and Afghani asylum-seekers illegally cross into Canada where police took them into custody at the non-official Roxham Road border crossing, Champlain, New York, U.S., March 24, 2023.
Haitian and Afghani asylum-seekers illegally cross into Canada where police took them into custody at the non-official Roxham Road border crossing, Champlain, New York, U.S., March 24, 2023.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye