American Renaissance
Previous Story       Next Story       View Comments       Send This Page       Date Archives       Category Archives

Asylum Seekers’ Success Rate Plunges Under Tory Government

More news stories on Canada

Bill Curry, Globe and Mail (Toronto), November 2, 2009

The number of refugees gaining asylum in Canada has dropped dramatically under the Conservatives as new figures reveal the impact of the government’s efforts to transform this country’s immigration system.

New statistics released by the government show the number of successful claims by refugees living in Canada fell to less than half of what it was when the Conservatives came to office.

The final immigration numbers for 2008—as well as future projections—come as Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney is promising to refocus Canada’s refugee system on what the government calls “real victims” rather than migrants seeking to abuse the process.

During the summer, the government imposed visa restrictions on Czechs and Mexicans as part of a broader attempt to block bogus refugee claims filed from within Canada. A spokesman for Mr. Kenney noted Monday that Mexico was the top source of asylum claims in 2008, yet the Immigration and Refugee Board rejected those claims at a rate of 90 per cent.

Spokesman Alykhan Velshi said the department expects that in 2010, Canada will resettle 3,900 refugees from Iraq, 2,900 Karen refugees from Burma and 2,500 Bhutanese refugees.

Critics say the numbers show a lack of compassion and a potential disregard of the government’s obligations under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to provide people with a fair hearing before deciding whether to deport them. They say lower targets will mean thousands of refugee claimants living in Canada will face further delays in hearings, and more will be deported to a very uncertain future.

“If we deport the wrong person because we denied their claims, some of them suffer torture, beatings, occasional death . . . drastic consequences,” NDP MP Olivia Chow said. She pointed to a report last month that a 24-year-old woman who was murdered in Mexico had made two failed refugee claims in Canada.

Citizenship and Immigration’s annual report, released on Friday afternoon, revealed that the number of refugees approved after applying in Canada dropped by 56 per cent from 2005 to 2008.

The report also shows the projected number of refugees who will be accepted from within Canada—known as “inland protected persons”—will remain near the lower 2008 levels both this year and next.

The lower numbers reflect the fallout of a refugee determination system that slowed to a crawl in the first two years after the Conservative defeat of the Paul Martin Liberal government in 2006.

The Conservatives vowed to overhaul the Immigration and Refugee Board—the panel that rules on refugee claims—saying it had become a haven for Liberal political appointees.

But in the move to a new system, many board positions were vacant for months, swelling the case backlog and limiting the number of hearings. There is now an 18-month delay between a refugee claim in Canada and an IRB hearing.

According to the minister’s spokesman, the time it took to change the IRB appointments process is the main reason for the drop in the 2008 numbers. But now that almost all of the board positions have been filled, he said, the numbers will climb again in the short term.

However, Mr. Velshi said the report’s projections do not take into account the minister’s plans for a new system that will weed out “bogus” claims made in Canada more quickly while still respecting the Charter.

“Clearly our system is being abused,” Mr. Velshi said. “[The minister] plans to reform our asylum system to give a faster decision to real asylum claimants.”

Janet Dench, the executive director of the Montreal-based Canadian Council for Refugees, said the report’s numbers show a clear change in Canada’s approach to refugees.

“Canada is becoming dramatically less welcoming toward refugees,” said Ms. Dench, who takes issue with the government’s assertions that it is showing an openness to refugee applications from abroad. “It’s a very bleak, bleak picture for refugees and for Canadians that care about refugees.”

Original article

(Posted on November 3, 2009)

     Previous story       Next Story       Post a Comment     Send This Page      Search

Comments

1 — M Klein wrote at 5:45 PM on November 3:

“It’s a very bleak, bleak picture for refugees and for Canadians that care about refugees.”

But excellent news for those who never asked or were consulted about whether they wanted to pay for refugees in the first place. It is utterly immoral of people like Ms Dench to force others to pay for them.

2 — Anonymous wrote at 7:03 PM on November 3:

If we deport the wrong person because we denied their claims, some of them suffer torture, beatings, occasional death … drastic consequences,” NDP MP Olivia Chow said. She pointed to a report last month that a 24-year-old woman who was murdered in Mexico had made two failed refugee claims in Canada.

That puerile statement is one HUGE guilt-trip to be laid at the feet of innocent Canadians. Has socialist Olivia Chow ever considered these foreign nationals are primarily the responsibility of their own governments? How does Canada fit into this scenario when Mexico is an independent sovereign nation of 105,000,000 people?

Does she expect this country’s mere 33,000,000 people to accommodate every Mexican with a sob story? Canadian taxpayers may be living in a land of trusting fools, but how foolish does one have to be — to get it!?

3 — Matt wrote at 9:09 PM on November 3:

The fact that the Tory government is still planning to resettle thousands of third-world ‘refugees’ in Canada is not good news. Yes, the Tories are moving in the right direction, but they’ve still got a long way to go. Shutting down the refugee system, and tracking down and forcibly deporting refugee claimants already in Canada, is what’s really needed.

4 — Anonymous wrote at 9:16 PM on November 3:

Sounds like Canada is not yet a total wreck.

5 — RHG wrote at 9:33 PM on November 3:

“Canada is becoming dramatically less welcoming toward refugees,” said Ms. Dench, who takes issue with the government’s assertions that it is showing an openness to refugee applications from abroad. “It’s a very bleak, bleak picture for refugees and for Canadians that care about refugees.”
____________

Maybe people are finally waking up and have stopped listening to people like Dench who they view as people bent on destroying their society through mass immigration.

6 — Schoolteacher wrote at 1:58 AM on November 4:

The only moral immigration policy is Whites only, and those had better stay on the right side of the law. It is not charity to force others to pay for your good deeds, it is moral posturing, what I believe St Paul called “spiritual pride”.

7 — SKIP wrote at 2:44 AM on November 4:

Spokesman Alykhan Velshi

A true Canadian name if iever I heard one AND! with some authority in the immigration dept. I would bet..

8 — Anonymous wrote at 7:31 AM on November 4:

Canada remains a real sucker nation when it somes to so-called “refugees”.

9 — Paul Bunyan wrote at 4:12 PM on November 4:

Funny how any brown, uneducated, criminal “refugee” has far less trouble, and jumps through far fewer flaming hoops than educated Whites when trying to immigrate to Canada.

I wonder if Mombootoo has multiple PhDs, is financially self-reliant, and speaks the ancient & dying French language?

If our northern neighbor really wants to beef-up their aging workforce, why not accept any college-educated White from any country, and allow them to become a Canadian citizen for a year or two of “Open-Enrollment?”

10 — Anonymous wrote at 2:33 AM on November 5:

Yes Canada is well on the way to being a total wreck.

The conservative government is like the republican party.

Traitorous!


Home      Top      Previous story       Next Story      Send This Page      Search