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.
Global News – Newfoundland Set to Welcome 2nd Planeload of Ukrainian Refugees
Newfoundland and Labrador is preparing to welcome another planeload of Ukrainian refugees. A plane carrying Ukrainians fleeing Russian-led attacks on their homeland is scheduled to arrive Tuesday at the St. John’s International Airport. It’s the second plane chartered by the provincial government to bring Ukrainians to Canada’s easternmost province – the first arrived on May 9, carrying 166 refugees.
Radio-Canada: Moncton est le premier choix des immigrants francophones au Nouveau-Brunswick
Les immigrants francophones qui viennent au Nouveau-Brunswick s’installent en majorité à Moncton. L’année dernière, 67 % d’entre eux ont choisi d’y vivre. Des immigrants et des intervenants du secteur trouvent toutefois qu’on pourrait en faire plus pour faciliter leur intégration. La langue et ses accents régionaux restent, dans certains cas, une barrière à l’intégration au Nouveau-Brunswick. Le Grand Moncton est une région en pleine croissance, avec l’arrivée de nombreux immigrants depuis plusieurs années.
CTV News – Tech Companies Ask Quebec Premier to Pause French Requirements for Immigrants
A group of Canadian technology companies is calling on the Quebec premier to pause a bill requiring immigrants to learn French within six months of arriving in the province. The 37 companies argued in a Tuesday letter to Francois Legault that the time frame immigrants have before they must use French for official purposes under Bill 96 is “an unrealistic deadline” for people adapting to a new home and could “do enormous damage to the province’s economy.”
National Post – Millions of Canadians Believe in White Replacement Theory: Poll
Abacus surveyed 1,500 randomly selected, nationally representative Canadian adults from May 20 to 24, as part of a series called “Trust & Facts: What Canadians Believe.” Respondents were also asked about specific conspiracy theories. More than one-third of Canadians believe in the so-called white replacement theory. Thirty-seven per cent of respondents, representing 11 million Canadians, agreed with the statement: “There is a group of people in this country who are trying to replace native-born Canadians with immigrants who agree with their political views.”
National Post – ‘No Standard’: Immigration Program for Artists and Athletes Faces Judicial Review
An immigration program the department’s own case managers reported to be confusing for applicants, with a high-rate of refusals, and a significant backlog will face a judicial review next week. Canada has a small immigration category for self-employed artists and athletes that is separate from other immigration streams. Immigration lawyer Pantea Jafari is representing just over a hundred of them who had their cases rejected after their files were transferred from the embassy in Ankara, Turkey, to one in Warsaw, Poland.
Edmonton Journal – ‘No Longer Have that Tension or That Fear’: Afghan Refugee Families Making Edmonton Home
Fears of cars exploding, his children being kidnapped or their school being attacked no longer plague Hamidullah Fidel since his family fled Afghanistan for a new start in Edmonton. The family of six uprooted from their Kabul home after Taliban forces entered the country’s capital city on Aug. 15, 2021. Since that time, 674 Afghan refugees have resettled in Edmonton, according to Catholic Social Services. Fidel’s family arrived in Canada on Jan. 11, 2022, part of a group of 172 Afghan refugees with a connection to the Afghan Human Rights and Democracy Organization (AHRDO).