The Guardian (USA)

‘Our families are dying’: outrage as program fails to bring Palestinia­ns to Canada

- Yara El Murr in Toronto

Eman al-Atbash, a 29-year-old financial analyst in Ontario, has already lost her brother, grandparen­ts, aunt and brother-in-law in Israel’s war on Gaza, which began in October.

Her brother Ahmad was shot by a sniper while her family was evacuating their neighborho­od in al-Rimal. He bled out to death in al-Shifa hospital, where doctors could not save him because of shortage of resources and the Israeli army’s siege. Her diabetic grandmothe­r, Moufideh, died of injuries and a lack of insulin. Her brother-in-law, Mohammad, was killed in a bombardmen­t when he ventured out to find a signal to call his brother, Eman’s husband.

“I’m scared of losing another person,” said Atbash, whose family has been displaced four times and is now sheltering in tents in Rafah. “Their situation is miserable. It is cold. My sisters have small children, they are all sick,” she said.

Initially, her parents had refused to flee their homes, but now five months into Israel’s assault on Gaza, they are clinging to the hope that Atbash might bring them to safety through a family reunificat­ion program announced by the Canadian government in December.

But so far, not a single person has successful­ly escaped from Gaza to Canada under the scheme.

When applicatio­ns opened on 9 January, “anchor relatives” in Canada had to submit notarized letters, fill online forms about each member of their family in Gaza and wait for a code that would allow them to submit the actual visa applicatio­ns.

The form included questions about scars on the bodies of the applicant’s family members, a complete history of their employment since age 16, a list of all addresses where they had lived and all their social media handles.

Such detailed scrutiny is unreasonab­le because many applicants have been displaced and do not have access to documents and records, and their homes and belongings were destroyed, said Randall Cohn, an immigratio­n lawyer.

A total of 986 applicants have so far received codes and have been able to submit their full forms. But even after meeting all the requiremen­ts, many of them, including Atbash, have still not received their codes.

Weeks after submitting the preliminar­y forms, Atbash and other applicants received a generic email saying their informatio­n was incomplete – but it did not specify which family member’s applicatio­n it was referring to.

Immigratio­n lawyer Randall Cohn said that some of his clients also received letters asking for family members in Gaza to get their biometrics done at their nearest visa center, in Cairo. However, the border between the Gaza Strip and Egypt is closed, with brokers asking for thousands of dollars

to secure safe crossing for Palestinia­ns who are desperate to leave.

“I honestly believe that it’s a factor of incompeten­ce, not malice,” Cohn said. “I think that they have a mostly automated, very standardiz­ed system that is famously run by an AI and that is not very nuanced or very customizab­le.”

“This is the banal violence of a system that cannot deal with the actual nuance or urgency of the situation,” he added.

Atbash called the immigratio­n agency several times to check in about her applicatio­n – and ask why it was marked as incomplete even though she had submitted all the requested documents. But officials she spoke to were unable to help.

Canada has opened its doors to many people fleeing war, generously granting Ukrainians tens of thousands of visas. “But us Gazans, our families are dying every day and every moment and we can’t bring them here,” said Atbash.

As of 4 March, only 12 people have been approved to come to Canada, according to the immigratio­n department. But so far, not one has reached the country through this program.

At least 13 Palestinia­n Canadians have lost 39 direct family members who would have been eligible, according to Nasser Najjar, a community organizer who surveyed more than 900 people through WhatsApp groups.

Many Palestinia­n Canadians feel “scammed” by the program, said community organizer Omar Mansour.

“We’re left in limbo to the point where people actually are saying that this is a whole scam, just a PR thing so the government can look good,” Mansour said. “It’s like throwing a bone for a dog. It can’t get more dehumanizi­ng than this.”

On 29 February 2024, the minister of immigratio­n, Marc Miller, said on national TV, “We are all failing Gazans” and admitted that the program had not had much success so far.

The ministry of immigratio­n has justified delays in processing by saying they are unable to ensure safe crossing from Gaza to Egypt, but critics say Canada needs to be more transparen­t about its efforts on the ground.

Meanwhile, the slow and confusing process is creating panic in the community.

Atbash, who is six months pregnant, has been so stressed that she hasn’t been sleeping, eating or drinking well for weeks. She says she was even taken to hospital several times due to dehydratio­n, and the medical profession­als who saw her expressed concern for the health of her baby.

“We are not merely statistics or casualties of war; we are humans, with hopes and dreams, with families torn by forces beyond our control,” Atbash wrote on a flyer she handed to protesters at a recent vigil in Toronto. “Every second wasted is a precious life lost.”

Their situation is miserable. It is cold. My sisters have small children, they are all sick

Eman al-Atbash

 ?? ?? A tent camp housing Palestinia­ns displaced by the Israeli offensive in Rafah, Gaza, on 27 February 2024. Photograph: Hatem Ali/AP
A tent camp housing Palestinia­ns displaced by the Israeli offensive in Rafah, Gaza, on 27 February 2024. Photograph: Hatem Ali/AP
 ?? Widak/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? People gather at at ‘Hands off Rafah’ rally in Edmonton, Canada. Photograph: Artur
Widak/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck People gather at at ‘Hands off Rafah’ rally in Edmonton, Canada. Photograph: Artur

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