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Mexican Invasion Title: Asylum seekers in Canada who fled Trump now trapped in legal limbo Thousands of people who fled to Canada to escape President Donald Trumps crackdown on illegal migrants have become trapped in legal limbo because of an overburdened refugee system, struggling to find work, permanent housing or enroll their children in schools. Refugee claims are taking longer to be completed than at any time in the past five years, according to previously unpublished Immigration and Refugee Board data provided to Reuters. Those wait times are set to grow longer after the IRB in April allocated up to half of its 127 tribunal members to focus on old cases. The number of delayed hearings more than doubled from 2015 to 2016 and is on track to increase again this year. Hearings are crucial to establishing a claimants legal status in Canada. Without that status, they struggle to convince employers to hire them or landlords to rent to them. Claimants cannot access loans or student financial aid, or update academic or professional credentials to meet Canadian standards. Canada's refugee system was struggling to process thousands of applications even before 3,500 asylum seekers began crossing the U.S. border on foot in January. It lacks the manpower to complete security screenings for claimants and hear cases in a timely manner. Often there are not enough tribunal members to decide cases or interpreters to attend hearings, the IRB said. More than 4,500 hearings scheduled in the first four months of 2017 were canceled, according to the IRB data. The government is now focused on clearing a backlog of about 24,000 claimants, including people who filed claims in 2012 or earlier. That means more than 15,000 people who have filed claims so far this year, including the new arrivals from the United States, will have to wait even longer for their cases to be heard. Asylum cases are already taking longer to finalize, on average, than at any time since Canada introduced a statutory two-month time limit in 2012. This year, it has been taking 5.6 months on average, compared to 3.6 months in 2013. Mohamed Daud, 36, left his family and a pending refugee claim in the United States and walked into Canada in February after hearing rumors of U.S. immigration raids. Daud, originally from Somalia, had been living and working legally in Nebraska but feared he would be detained and then deported at an upcoming check-in with immigration officials. His May 8 hearing with a Canadian refugee tribunal was canceled three days beforehand. He has not been given a new date. "I dont know when they will call me. I cant work. It isnt easy," said Daud. While waiting for a work permit, he gets approximately C$600 ($453) a month in government social assistance and shares a room in an apartment with six other asylum seekers. Still, Daud doesn't regret abandoning his life in the United States. "The worry, the fear is the same," he said. To try to speed cases through, Canadas refugee tribunal has put people from certain war-torn countries such as Syria and Yemen on an expedited track that requires no hearings. Border agents are working overtime to address the backlog in security screenings, said Scott Bardsley, spokesman for Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, who oversees the Canada Border Services Agency. INDEFINITE WAIT Asylum claimants are eligible for work permits while awaiting hearings, but employers are often reluctant to employ people with temporary social insurance numbers whose future is uncertain, refugee lawyers told Reuters. "How do you establish yourself when your status is unknown?" said Toronto-based lawyer Aadil Mangalji. This year is on track to be the highest year for refugee claims since at least 2011, according to government statistics. The stresses on the Canadian system mirror those of other countries with an open door policy. In Sweden, rising financial strains involved in resettlement were partly behind a move to introduce tough asylum laws. Honduran Raul Contreras, 19, who walked across the Quebec border in March and whose hearing has been postponed indefinitely, is staying in a government-subsidized Toronto hotel with his mother, step-father and uncle. Contreras, who spends his days at a local library or working out in the hotel gym, says he has been repeatedly rejected by landlords. "They just said that they didn't rent places to refugee claimants," he said. "(They) said that refugees don't have jobs and probably wouldn't pay." Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: cranky (#0)
Wow, a whole 24,000? Can't handle that? Wow. What a stupid country; no wonder they're totally dependent on OUR Defense Department and hired a Ken Doll as a seatwarmer.
Sure but it is still their country. They shouldn't care too much about our opinions nor should we care that much about theirs. BTW, did you notice that Trump imposed pulp-wood tariffs on Canadian products like plywood, forcing Trudeau to announce the Canadian government would pay the tariff for Canadian companies exporting the U.S.? It didn't get a lot of notice. So Canada is paying a plywood tariff and taking some illegals off our hands. Where's the downside for us?
They're not, really. There isn't any foreign power that threatens Canada militarily in any serious way. They have a substantial military, but they don't really NEED one. That's not thanks to our defense department, but thanks to our peaceable nature vis-a-vis Canada. They could never make a military large enough to defend against us, and we're the only potential threat.
However, they will cheerfully inform Yanks that the last time we invaded them, they burned the White House.
They do say that, but it's not true. The BRITISH came, by sea, with their massive fleet and their rwgular Army, and landed and marched to DC and burnt it. The CANADIANS did not march down and do that. The British Army that landed were regulars from the European war with Napoleon that had just ended. There was no Canadian militia present. So no, the Canadians did not burn down the US capital. An entirely British Army did.
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