Canada sees refugee influx from US border

Several hundred asylum seekers, mainly from Africa and the Middle East, have entered Canada, with agencies blaming the Trump immigration agenda for the influx.

Migrants from Somalia cross into Canada from the United States

Most of the people crossing the US border into Canada to claim asylum had been in the US legally. (AAP)

Most of the people crossing the US border into Canada to claim asylum had been in the US legally, and Canada is sharing their information with US authorities to help understand the phenomenon, a top official says.

Several hundred asylum seekers, mainly from Africa but also the Middle East, have entered Canada. The refugees and migrant agencies blame the exodus on moves by US President Donald Trump to clamp down on immigration.

"We have provided information about the specific documents that were presented at the border because those are American documents," Canadian Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale told reporters.

Goodale spoke after meeting US Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly in Ottawa for talks on the influx, which is putting domestic pressure on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Emergency responders and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are struggling to respond to people defying wintry conditions to cross the undefended border near Emerson, Manitoba.

Manitoba premier Brian Pallister is demanding Trudeau's Liberal government provide money and resources.

Ottawa says there is a chance the flow of people will increase as the weather improves.

"We obviously have safety concerns on both sides of the border," Goodale said, adding that he had seen no evidence yet of any profiteering or human trafficking.

Kelly told CTV that he and his Canadian counterparts were "perplexed as to why people who generally, as a group, have come to the United States legally" would make their way north.

Canadian officials caution against the idea that Trump's policies are solely to blame. Goodale said some of the asylum seekers had been planning their move in early 2016, months before the November election that brought Trump to power.

Goodale said there was little Canada could do, since the "vast majority" of those crossing the border had been in the United States legally and enjoyed freedom of movement.


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2 min read
Published 11 March 2017 11:34am
Source: AAP


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