Une alliance nationale visant à fournir une base factuelle pour l'établissement et l'intégration des nouveaux arrivants, ainsi que pour la promotion de communautés accueillantes au Canada
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.
Radio-Canada – Immigration : le N.-B. est appelé à renforcer ses liens avec l’Afrique francophone
Olivier Hussein lance un appel au gouvernement du Nouveau-Brunswick. En plein débat de société sur l’immigration, il désire que Fredericton renforce ses relations avec l’Afrique francophone, au même titre que le Québec, que l’Ontario et même la France. « Le Canada a besoin de l’Afrique, comme l’Afrique a besoin du Canada », croit celui qui jouera le rôle d’ambassadeur du Canada au Salon de la diaspora africaine, du 13 au 15 juillet, en Côte-d’Ivoire.
Global News – As Canada Faces Wildfires and Smoke, Is It Ready for Climate Migrants?
Air quality has plummeted during recent weeks because of wildfire smoke, made worse by the adverse effects of climate change in an “unprecedented” fire season. But as Canada battles environmental emergencies, advocates are asking if the country is ready to play its part in a global crisis of climate migrants.
Toronto Star – She Came to Canada for an Education. Desperate For a Place to Live, She Previously Had to Rent a Room with No Door
Parul Yadav saw Canada as a pathway to her future. The 23-year-old, who arrived in Toronto alone but bright-eyed in late 2021, had pored over post-secondary programs around the world from her home in Delhi, India, carefully selecting a public relations course at Humber College for its hands-on learning opportunities. Toronto, she was told, was a multicultural city — one where newcomers like her would be welcomed. What she didn’t expect was a housing crisis, one that would become an ever-present stressor as she began her studies.
La Presse – Blocage à l’ambassade du Canada au Liban
Le milieu des affaires, Québec et Ottawa répètent sur toutes les tribunes qu’il faut accueillir des immigrants pour combler nos besoins de main-d’œuvre. Pourtant, des entreprises qui souhaitent recruter au Liban se heurtent constamment à des refus de visas inexplicables de la part de l’ambassade à Beyrouth, dénoncent des avocats spécialisés en immigration. « Depuis septembre 2022, on voit que les dossiers du Liban sont refusés pour des raisons farfelues », m’a résumé Grace Nehme, avocate spécialisée en droit de l’immigration et fondatrice du cabinet Lex Internationalis.
CBC News – Sudanese Community in N.L. Protests Fatal Police Shooting of Omar Mohammed
“All the Sudanese community are very concerned about what happened to him and that’s why we are protesting to show our frustration, to show that we are not accepting what is happening,” said Abubaker Hamed with the Sudanese Community Association of Newfoundland and Labrador. Since the shooting incident on June 12, members of the Sudanese community have expressed frustration with the lack of information provided by police.
Toronto Star – ‘It’s Just a Question of Opening Our Eyes’: The Not-So-Secret Recipes to Helping Newcomers Thrive in Small-Town Canada
It was as difficult as you can imagine for Doriane Aurelle Etemgoua and her family to leave behind Douala, Cameroon’s largest city, for the promise of a nursing job among the 7,000-plus souls of La Sarre, Que. Officials in the region lured Etemgoua and several dozen other African nurses. But first, Etemgoua, who has a master’s degree in public health and left a good job in the pediatric emergency ward of a hospital, would have to go back to school for 10 months to prepare for provincial nursing exams. Her immigrant experience has been one of shock.