Nine people flee U.S. border patrol to
seek asylum in Canada
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[February 18, 2017]
By Christinne Muschi
CHAMPLAIN, N.Y. (Reuters) - Nine
asylum-seekers, including four children, barely made it across the
Canadian border on Friday as a U.S. border patrol officer tried to stop
them and a Reuters photographer captured the scene.
As a U.S. Customs and Border Patrol officer seized their passports and
questioned a man in the front passenger seat of a taxi that had pulled
up to the border in Champlain, New York, four adults and four young
children fled the cab and ran to Royal Canadian Mounted Police on the
other side.
One by one they scrambled across the snowy gully separating the two
countries. RCMP officers watching from the other side helped them up,
lifting the younger children and asking a woman, who leaned on her
fellow passenger as she walked, if she needed medical care.
The children looked back from where they had come as the U.S. officer
held the first man, saying his papers needed to be verified.
The man turned to a pile of belongings and heaved pieces of luggage two
at a time into the gully -- enormous wheeled suitcases, plastic shopping
bags, a black backpack.
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"Nobody cares about us," he told journalists. He said they were all from
Sudan and had been living and working in Delaware for two years.
The RCMP declined on Friday to confirm the nationalities of the people.
A Reuters photo showed that at least one of their passports was
Sudanese.
The man then appeared to grab their passports from the U.S. officer
before making a run for the border. The officer yelled and gave chase
but stopped at the border marker. Canadian police took hold of the man's
arm as he crossed.
The border patrol officer told his counterpart that the man was in the
United States illegally and that he would have detained him.
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Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officers assist a child from a
family that claimed to be from Sudan as they walk across the
U.S.-Canada border into Hemmingford, Canada, from Champlain in New
York. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi
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Officers on both sides momentarily eyed the luggage strewn in the
snow before the U.S. officer took it, and a walker left on the road,
to the border line.
The RCMP carried the articles to their vehicles, and the people
piled in to be driven to a nearby border office to be interviewed by
police and to make a refugee claim.
People seeking refugee status have been pouring over the Canada-U.S.
border as the United States looks to tighten its policies on
refugees and illegal immigrants. Asylum-seekers sneak across because
even if they are caught, they can make a claim in Canada; if they
make a claim at a border crossing, they are turned away. [L1N1FO1Z8]
(Writing by Anna Mehler Paperny; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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