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.
La Presse – Des républicains s’inquiètent du trafic d’êtres humains à la frontière canadienne
La frontière des États-Unis avec le Canada, la plus longue du monde et un symbole durable de la coopération entre les deux pays voisins, n’a jamais vraiment été un enjeu partisan au Capitole. Mais c’est peut-être sur le point de changer. Deux républicains de la Chambre des représentants – Mike Kelly, de la Pennsylvanie, et Ryan Zinke, du Montana – ont enrôlé 26 autres membres du Congrès dans une nouvelle coalition axée sur l’immigration, la criminalité et la sécurité nationale à la frontière canado-américaine.
Toronto Star – A Doctor Back Home, a Dollarama Cashier in Canada: Will Ontario’s Plan Ease Way for Foreign-Trained MDs?
Twenty-six-year-old Mariam was a doctor in her native Syria. She treated dozens of patients every day for more than three years. Mariam’s story is hardly uncommon. She is among the hundreds of foreign-born doctors admitted to this country based on their education and experience, who face challenges integrating into health-care systems. Since 2015, over 3,600 physicians became permanent residents of Canada, according to Immigration Canada, but advocates estimate only one-third of them work in health care.
CBC News – Non-Ukrainian Family Members in Limbo Awaiting Expedited Visas
Hundreds of families seeking refuge in Canada from the war in Ukraine say a processing discrepancy at Canada’s immigration department is breaking up households for months or keeping them stuck overseas in precarious living conditions. Denis Kokhno says he, his wife and teenage daughter applied together for their visas under the the Canada-Ukraine authorization for emergency travel program (CUAET) on June 1, 2022. Nine months later, they’ve received two out of three so far.
CBC News – Roxham Road Is Just a Small Piece of a Global Migration Crisis
“Irregular migration is one of the major problems confronted by the Western hemisphere and Roxham Road is just a symptom of that problem,” U.S. Ambassador to Canada David Cohen told the CBC’s Power & Politics. “I’m sort of intentionally not referencing the Safe Third Country Agreement because that’s not the issue,” Cohen said. “Whatever you do to the Safe Third Country Agreement is not going to do anything — or is going to do very little — about irregular migration.”
Montreal Gazette – ‘There Is No Plan’: St-Laurent Community Groups Struggle to Aid Asylum Seekers
The Centre de pédiatrie sociale de St-Laurent was used to serving asylum seekers in need, but had never seen anything like the wave that started last summer. Previous influxes, like the masses who came in 2017 when Donald Trump threatened deportation for tens of thousands, were mainly refugee claimants who had lived in the U.S. for years. Now, most of their new clients are among the 39,171 asylum seekers who entered Quebec at the unofficial border crossing at Roxham Rd. last year.
CTV News – Non-Profit Group Sees ‘Massive Uptick’ in Ukrainian Refugees Arriving on Vancouver Island
Max Shkurupii is one of 951 Ukrainians who have fled their homeland and are now living on Vancouver Island. Landing on the island in November, his family counts themselves lucky that they were able to find housing quickly. His family might be the exception as a flood of new Ukrainians arrive on the island and face a housing crisis and strained resources.