|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Canada hides behind US to attack refugees
By Guy Charron
16 December 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Canadas Liberal government has introduced legislation
aimed at drastically reducing the number of refugee claimants.
Once Parliament accepts the changes, persons claiming refugee
status on entering Canada from the US will, with few exceptions,
immediately be returned south of the border. The pretext for this
change is that the US is a safe third country and
those wanting asylum should seek refugee status there.
In 2001, 14,000 refugee claimantsor more than in one
every three persons seeking asylum in Canadadid so on crossing
into the country from the US. A further 7,000 persons applied
for refugee status on entering Canada from the US in the first
eight months of this year.
The changes to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act give
effect to a refugee pact negotiated between Canadas Liberal
government and the Bush administration last summer and initialled
in early December. The Safe Third-Country Agreement provides for
the routine return of refugee claimants entering either country
from the other. But the ostensible reciprocity is belied by the
fact that the cross-border flow of refugees is massively toward
Canada. Last year, only a few hundred persons entering the US
from Canada applied for refugee status.
Refugee rights organizations on both sides of the border have
condemned the Safe Third-Country Agreement. First, because it
will result in fewerlikely far fewerpersons fleeing
persecution and injustice obtaining asylum. Traditionally, US
authorities have been far less willing to grant political asylum
than their Canadian counterparts. And this is particularly true
in the case of refugee claimants from Central and South Americathose
who are most likely to enter Canada from the US.
Second, refugee applicants are treated more harshly in the
US while awaiting adjudication of their cases. The US detains
many more refugee applicants and unlike Canada has no prohibitions
on the detention of children. Third, the Third Country Agreement
will likely result in people resorting to dangerous and life-threatening
means to enter Canada illegally, so as to benefit from Canadas
hitherto less restrictive interpretation of its obligation, under
international law, to provide asylum to those fleeing political
persecution.
Ottawa has tried to present the Third-Country Agreement as
a concession to US pressure. This is a bald-faced lie. US authorities
long resisted the return of refugee claimants, fearing that this
would exacerbate the backlog in its refugee determination system
and add to the US refugee population. However, the Canadian right,
supported by much of the corporate media, has long railed against
Canadas supposedly lax refugee system. In restricting
the number of refugee claimants, the Chrétien Liberal government
has once again ceded to pressure from the Canadian Alliance and
the most rapacious sections of big business.
This is not to say that the US, and the Bush administration
in particular, have not been highly critical of Canadian immigration
and refugee policy. Canadas Liberal government and the Bush
administration are currently working to implement a 30-point agreement,
reached in the aftermath of September 11, aimed at strengthening
border controls.
Speaking in Washington December 5 after meeting with Homeland
Security Director Tom Ridge, Deputy Prime Minister John Manley
declared, I think we need to accept the reality that the
US feels vulnerable and security is continuing to be the order
of the day here.... We think we can help in that and thats
been my message to Governor Ridge.
The Third-Party Agreement is a quid pro quo meant to reward
Canadian authorities for taking other measures that do address
US security concerns. Nor is this first time Canadian authorities
have cynically and hypocritically used the claim of US pressure
to justify the adoption of reactionary and repressive measures.
In keeping with Canadas new harsher stance against refugees,
Ottawa has launched a pilot project under which refugee claimants
whose identity the government is unsure of are being routinely
detained. According to a border guard interviewed by the Globe
and Mail, Before we were expected to release. Now were
encouraged to detain. This is a 180-degree turn in procedures.
Meanwhile, the debate within the Canadian elite over just how
far to go in coordinating Canadian immigration and refugee policies
and border controls with the US is intensifying. Immigration Minister
Dennis Coderre has floated the idea of a new national identity
card with bio-metric identifiers such as fingerprints. Coderre
has claimed the card would help address US concerns about Canadian
citizens who immigrated from Third World countries.
Speaking in Washington this past week, former Canadian Prime
Minister Brian Mulroney called for a joint Canada-US security
perimeter. Its a prelude to more intense and vital
trade negotiations, he told reporters while attending a
conference to mark 10 years since the negotiation of NAFTA (North
American Free Trade Agreement).
See Also:
Aide to Canadian prime minister
replaced for calling Bush a moron
[28 November 2002]
Canada-US row over targeting
of Middle Eastern visitors
[5 November 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |