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.


The New York Times – Border Crisis Shifts as Undocumented Children’s Cases Overwhelm Courts

Last summer, President Obama declared a crisis along the border with Mexico in response to the tens of thousands of unaccompanied children coming into the country. Detention centers in Texas overflowed, prompting the federal Department of Homeland Security to open emergency shelters. Political tempers boiled over — Rick Perry, who was the governor of Texas, ordered 1,000 National Guard troops to defend the border. The Obama administration created a priority juvenile docket in immigration courts to speed up deportation proceedings. One year later, the number of children arriving at the border has slowed dramatically, in part because Mexico has been returning children to their home countries before they can reach the United States. But the crisis has not ended. It has simply shifted. It is playing out in courtrooms crowded with young defendants but lacking lawyers and judges to handle the sheer volume of cases. Thousands of children without lawyers have been issued deportation orders, some because they never showed up in court.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/24/nyregion/border-crisis-shifts-as-undocumented-childrens-cases-overwhelm-courts.html

CBC – Temporary Foreign Workers and Supporters Denounce Poor Treatment on Quebec Farms

A bicycle convoy of protesters denouncing abuses of temporary migrant worker rights gathered on Saturday at a Latin American cultural festival in St-Rémi, in Quebec’s Montérégie region. Led by Noé Arteaga, a Guatemalan temporary migrant worker who won a lawsuit against now-bankrupt Quebec tomato producer Savoura, the group stopped by this weekend’s Fiesta de Cultures. The event was in part sponsored by the Mexican and Guatemalan consulates. Security guards and provincial police at the festival denied the protesters entry, telling them they could only protest outside. That led to a scuffle that saw protesters get dragged away from the festival site. Supporters and members of the Justice for Noé Committee attended the protest to demand better treatment for temporary foreign workers — usually people from Latin and South American countries who are hired by Canadian companies to harvest crops and work in slaughterhouses. Arteaga describes the treatment of temporary foreign workers as inhumane. “We don’t buy Mexican products because it’s slavery,” he said. “But they don’t take into consideration that there are the same conditions, the same problems for temporary workers here [in Quebec].”

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/temporary-foreign-workers-and-supporters-denounce-poor-treatment-on-quebec-farms-1.3200897

CBC – Europe Migrants: 2,000 Rush Past Police into Macedonia

Thousands of rain-soaked migrants on Saturday rushed past Macedonian riot police who were attempting to block them from entering Macedonia from Greece. Police fired stun grenades and dozens of people were injured in the border clashes. By the end of the day, everyone got across, including several hundred migrants, mostly elderly and children, who had remained on the Greek side of the border. Thousands then boarded trains and buses that took them up north to the border with Serbia from where they will attempt to enter European Union-member Hungary. The tumult started when police allowed a small group of migrants with young children to cross the frontier, and crowds in the back squeezed the migrants toward the shielded police wall. Many women, at least one pregnant, and children fell to the ground, apparently fainting after squeezing past the cordon. Then thousands of others, including women with babies and men carrying small children, grabbed their chance to climb over razor wire or run across a field not protected by the fence to enter Macedonia.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/europe-migrants-2-000-rush-past-police-into-macedonia-1.3200282

EJ Insight – “Chinese Invasion” of Vancouver Real Estate: What’s the Truth?

Bruce Langereis, president of Vancouver developer Delta Group, has challenged the notion of “Chinese buyers”, especially in the context of Vancouver where nearly one-third of its population is ethnically Chinese. “There is much attention on Chinese buyers but many of us forget that these ‘Chinese buyers’ have been in Vancouver for a long time,” Langereis said. According to the Calgary Chinese Cultural Centre, Chinese migration in Canada can be traced back to 1858 when the first wave of Chinese people came to pan for gold in British Columbia. While “foreign money” is often cited as a major factor that drives Vancouver’s property prices, Michael Ferreira, a managing principal at consultancy firm Urban Analytics, has raised questions on who exactly would constitute “foreign investors”. “Should we consider foreign buyers with local representation ‘foreign investors’? If their family spends some of their time in Vancouver, does that make them local residents or foreign investors?” he said. […] As the local government is not tracking where the buyers come from, Yves Tiberghien, director of the Institute of Asian Research at the University of British Columbia (UBC), believes the lack of reliable data partly fuels the debate on the “Chinese money” in Vancouver’s property market.

http://www.ejinsight.com/20150822-chinese-invasion-in-vancouver-real-estate/

Toronto Star – Canada Border Services Agency Confirms Identity for “Man with No Name”

After almost a decade, the “Man with No Name” has finally had his identity and birthplace confirmed. Canada Border Services Agency officials have at last verified the identity and birthplace of Michael Mvogo, who has been in detention in Canada for more than nine years over immigration violations, according to federal government documents obtained by the Star. The CBSA has a notarized copy of his birth certificate as well as a video and a written statement that establish Mvogo’s identity and birthplace in Cameroon, according to the internal CBSA report. Those documents and the video eliminate the last obstacle facing the CBSA in its attempt to remove Mvogo from Canada. Mvogo, who had originally been picked up in Toronto, is supposed to finally be deported on or by Aug. 24, according to a Star source. […]Last year, a United Nations human rights monitoring body issued a report condemning Canada for detaining Mvogo for so long and urged that he be immediately released.

http://www.thestar.com/news/immigration/2015/08/22/canada-border-services-agency-confirms-identity-for-man-with-no-name.html

Le Devoir – Entre intégration et intolérance

Surprise : la Reine des Cantons-de-l’Est s’illustre pour ses crimes haineux dans un lot de villes canadiennes. Excès de documentation, plaident les autorités ; écosystème social en mutation et réaction à vif au débat sur la charte des valeurs, affirment certains. Cinquante-deux pancartes écrites à la main : le décompte a été conservé en mémoire, avec la précision du chiffre, par Mohamed Kounna, propriétaire d’une épicerie-boucherie à saveur moyen-orientale, sise rue Belvédère Sud, à Sherbrooke. « J’en ai enlevé 52 sur toute la rue, résume-t-il d’une voix douce et calme, debout devant le comptoir de viandes, dont le caractère halal est affiché, sans ostentation, sur la vitrine de son commerce. Dessus, on pouvait lire : “ Non à l’islam. Non aux musulmans ”. Avec des choses comme ça, on ne peut pas le nier : il y a, dans la société, des gens qui acceptent plus difficilement l’autre. » Cette « récolte » de pancartes vindicatives, c’est entre 2013 et 2014 qu’il l’a réalisée. Le Québec au grand complet vivait alors au temps de débats passionnés sur l’identité nationale et la charte des valeurs, alimentant entre autres la campagne électorale du Parti québécois.

http://www.ledevoir.com/societe/actualites-en-societe/448196/sherbrooke-multiculturel-entre-integration-et-intolerance