Exclusive: Canada deporting thousands even as pandemic rages
Send a link to a friend
[January 22, 2021]
By Anna Mehler Paperny
TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada deported
thousands of people even as COVID-19 raged last year, data seen by
Reuters shows, and lawyers say deportations are ramping up, putting
people needlessly at risk in the midst of a global health emergency.
Like many other countries, Canada is struggling to stop a second wave
from spiraling out of control, and its political leaders are begging
residents to stay home to prevent the spread.
Lawyers and human rights advocates are decrying Canada's November
decision to resume deportations. Until now, the extent of the country's
pandemic deportations was not known, but recent interviews with
immigration lawyers and scrutiny of government numbers has shed light on
the situation.
Canada counted 12,122 people as removed in 2020 - 875 more than the
previous year and the highest number since at least 2015, according to
Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) data seen by Reuters. The
government says this was necessary and done safely.
The CBSA says the high number last year is because it includes people
who decided to leave on their own, termed "administrative removals." In
2019 there were 1,657 administrative removals, compared with 8,215 last
year.
Even subtracting those numbers, that leaves thousands of people deported
as the pandemic raged and governments cautioned against travel of any
kind for safety reasons.
Even as Canada continues to deport non-citizens during a health crisis,
U.S. President Joe Biden paused deportations for 100 days within hours
of being sworn in on Wednesday.
Canada officially imposed a moratorium on deportations in March that it
lifted at the end of November.
"As much as a human rights concern it's a common sense concern," said
Bill Frelick, director of Human Rights Watch's Refugee Rights Program.
Countries' deportation practices have varied over the course of the
pandemic. Several, including the United Kingdom, suspended deportations
before resuming them. Others, like Ireland, have kept suspensions in
place.
The CBSA said it has been prioritizing deportations for reasons of
"serious admissibility," including criminality.
The vast majority of people deported in 2020 were for reasons of
"noncompliance." Even taking into account administrative removals, more
than 1,000 people were deported during the suspension, the data shows.
'IT'S UNBELIEVABLE'
Public health experts have warned that travel of any kind can spread
COVID-19 from one place to another, a risk that grows with the advent of
more highly transmissible COVID variants.
Many of the deportation trips involve transfers at multiple airports and
flights during which people are placed in enclosed space in close
quarters with other people for hours at a time, a situation ripe for
transmission.
[to top of second column]
|
A Canadian flag flies in front of the Peace Tower on Parliament Hill
in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, March 22, 2017. REUTERS/Chris Wattie/File
Photo
Since August Canada has been conducting deportations with CBSA
escorts, so Canadians are also making thousands of these round-trip
flights for deportation purposes.
Organizations including the Canadian Bar Association and the
Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers spoke out against Canada's
decision to resume deportations.
"As everybody is putting in place more restrictions in an effort to
flatten the curve ... CBSA made a shocking decision to simply go
back to business as usual," said Maureen Silcoff, president of the
Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers.
"Canada has taken the position that nonessential travel is barred
yet people are now being removed and there's no indication that
those removals are essential."
The CBSA said in a statement it lifted the moratorium on
deportations because foreign government offices and borders had
reopened, airlines restarted their routes and public-health
protocols "have contributed to a high degree of safety for persons
being removed by air."
"Canada continues to uphold both its human rights and public safety
obligations in relation to the removal of inadmissible foreign
nationals," the statement said. "The removal process includes many
checks and balances to ensure that the removal is conducted in a
fair and just manner."
But these deportations are endangering not only the people being
deported but the government officers tasked with accompanying them
to their destination, lawyers say.
Immigration lawyer Lorne Waldman's Toronto office went from getting
no removal cases to getting three or four in the space of a week, he
said. He is now fighting for a failed refugee claimant with two
young Canadian children who faces deportation to Egypt Monday.
"They're ramping it up as if there was no pandemic," he said. "It's
unbelievable."
(Reporting by Anna Mehler Paperny in Toronto; Editing by Denny
Thomas and Matthew Lewis)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |