Media Roundup

La revue de presse fournit des liens aux articles récents et archivés, à la fois en anglais et en français, sur l’immigration et la diversité lesquels ont été publiés dans les média locaux et nationaux. Il y a également des articles internationaux. Cette section est mise à jour hebdomadairement.


Globe and Mail – B.C. Immigrant Agency Sees Decline in Government-Assisted Refugees

The Immigrant Services Society of BC has reported that 642 government-assisted refugees arrived in the province last year – a number that represents one-third of the 1,911 who arrived in 2016. The target number of arrivals was 900. Chris Friesen from ISS of BC said that the immigration officials he spoke to in Ottawa last month were unable to point to any specific reason for this significant drop in arrivals.

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/british-columbia/article-bc-immigrant-agency-sees-decline-in-government-assisted-refugees/

New York Times – A Black Woman Who Defied Segregation in Canada Will Appear on Its Currency

Viola Desmond, a businesswoman who had her own line of cosmetics and who died in 1965, was prosecuted for trying to defraud the provincial government of 1 cent — the difference in sales tax for a seat in the balcony, where blacks were expected to sit and the whites-only ground floor ticket price. Now she is about to become the first black person — and the first woman other than a British royal — to appear alone on Canadian currency.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/12/world/canada/viola-desmond-currency.html

Toronto Star – Protesters Push Back Against Immigration Law That Deters Disabled People

A small group of protesters spent Monday morning holding signs and chanting outside immigration minister Ahmed Hussen’s constituency office in North York. They were protesting a 40-year-old section of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act that says foreign nationals are inadmissible if their medical condition “might reasonably be expected to cause excessive demand on health or social services.” Protesters plastered the door to Hussen’s office with signs calling for the end of that law, and displayed pictures of people with their children who they had to leave behind.

https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2018/03/12/protesters-push-back-against-immigration-law-that-deters-disabled-people.html

CBC News – Syrian Scholarship Students Now Seeking Refugee Protection

Five Syrian scholarship students have applied for refugee protection and some say it’s because they feel let down by the renowned Toronto charity that brought them to Canada. Daughters For Life insists it fully supported the students and says their decision to seek asylum is based on the advantages of refugee protection and not because of any alleged shortcomings in the scholarship program. But in interviews, three of the Syrian students say the foundation didn’t prepare them for life in Canada.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/syrian-student-scholarship-refugee-1.4568044

Toronto Star – Federal Court Asked to Spare Former Clients of Immigration Consultant Fraudster

Former clients of an unlicensed consultant convicted in one of Canada’s biggest immigration scams have asked the court to spare them from being removed from Canada for “misrepresentation.” In a proposed class action application filed with the Federal Court last week, Chao Yuan Lin and Xiang Zhou — two of Xun “Sunny” Wang’s former clients — said evidence at the man’s criminal trial indicated “Wang or his staff committed immigration fraud and not their clients.”

https://www.thestar.com/news/immigration/2018/03/10/federal-court-asked-to-spare-former-clients-of-immigration-consultant-fraudster.html

CBC News – ‘Maybe we’re singled out?’: Iranians in Quebec Say Delays for Permanent Residency Are Excessive, Unreasonable

Some Iranian nationals living in Quebec are speaking out, wondering if they’re being treated unfairly as they wait for months on end to become permanent residents. “Maybe we’re singled out?,” said Navid Sharifi, who moved to Montreal with his wife, Bahareh Goodarzi, in 2011. The couple, who came to Quebec under the Skilled Workers Program, applied for permanent residency status almost two years ago. Despite the average wait time for applicants in their category being around 15 months, they still haven’t received an answer.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/maybe-we-re-singled-out-iranians-in-quebec-say-delays-for-permanent-residency-are-excessive-unreasonable-1.4570716