Thursday, October 20, 2022

After Devastating Rejection, High-Profile Afghan Women’s Rights Activist Submits New Canadian Application

 

Sharen Craig, Bessa Whitmore, and Farzana Adell are trying once more to gain life-saving asylum for  Afghan women's rights defender Adell, whose protection application was denied by Ottawa.

 

OTTAWA – At 12:01 am on October 17, a dedicated group of Ottawa women submitted a Group of 5 sponsorship application for leading Afghan women’s rights defender Farzana Adell Ghadiya, who formerly worked in Kabul as Chief of Staff for the senior advisor to the president of Afghanistan on UN affairs. They stayed up late because that was the opening date for a recently announced time- and space-limited program to accept 3,000 Afghan refugees who were unable to register with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

 

Bessa Whitmore, a member of the group, has long offered Adell Ghadiya a free bedroom in her Ottawa home. She is part of the group of Ottawa women who maintain weekly contact with the persecuted women’s rights activist, Hazara minority, and Ismaili Muslim, who is now hiding in a third country where her visa runs out in two months.  The women, who already provide Adell Ghadiya with monthly financial support, have pledged to ensure all of her needs are taken care of for up to a year if she is approved to come to Canada.

 

 The women are relieved that Farzana was able to access the system and has now been assigned a file number, providing them some hope that her application will be seriously considered.

 

Adell Ghadiya continues to maintain hope that the high-profile campaign of support will help get her to safety in Canada.

 

“I was deeply disappointed when Canada rejected my first application without even reading it,” Adell Ghadiya shared from hiding. “When I got the rejection letter, it looked like they processed it incorrectly, because they said I was not eligible for something I didn’t even apply for. I hope this time that the assigned people in the immigration office read my application in detail and decide without prejudice as soon as possible. Time is running out for me, and I am afraid of being sent back to Afghanistan, where the whole world knows what will happen to a women’s rights defender like me.”

 

Earlier this month, it was revealed that, despite the clearly-defined risk of being forcibly returned to torture and death in Afghanistan, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) had rejected Adell Ghadiya’s application for protection. She had applied for a Temporary Resident Permit for Protection (TRP) given that she meets all the qualifications under the humanitarian program for Afghan refugees. It was a perfectly legitimate route for refugees to get to Canada (one often employed successfully by the Rural Refugee Rights Network), but IRCC failed to read her application materials and issued a boilerplate rejection usually sent to applicants for a temporary resident visa, a document that is time-limited and premised on the likelihood that the visitor will return to their country of origin.

 

But Farzana did not apply for a temporary resident visa. She applied for a TRP.

 

Advocates and supporters – including 35,000 people who have signed a support petition –  have ever since been calling on Immigration Minister Sean Fraser to immediately intervene and exercise his legally mandated discretion to provide Farzana with a Temporary Resident Permit as a path to safety and permanent residence.

 

“With the Group of Five sponsorship, we have one more pathway for Farzana to get here,” says Whitmore, adding she is “exasperated on behalf of Farzana and so many others in her shoes that the Canadian government just can’t seem to get it together when it comes to honouring the lives of Afghan refugees. The machinery seems to work if you’re Ukrainian, which is great, but not for Afghans. Hopefully this time the result will be different for Farzana.”

 

Farzana’s women’s support group and many other supporters are urging IRCC to expedite Adell Ghadiya’s file given the short time left on her non-renewable third country visa.

 

Sharen Craig, who speaks daily with Farzana, is hopeful that the sponsorship application will be approved, but worries about the long-term toll Canada’s bureaucratic bungles are having on her friend.  “Farzana speaks out despite the risk to herself, not only on her own behalf but for all Afghans facing the brutality of the new regime in Kabul. But what does it take to get her here? We have spoken with so many MPs, there’s been so much attention to her case, and yet all we get is a brick wall of rejection. I am up every night worried with fear for my lovely friend, whom I truly feel has become like a daughter to me. Even though this sponsorship checks all the right boxes, I won’t get a good night’s sleep until I am hugging Farzana here in Ottawa.”

 

For more information contact tasc@web.ca or (613) 300-9536.

 

Rural Refugee Rights Network

2583 Carling Ave., Unit M052

Ottawa, ON K2B 7H7

(613) 300-9536, tasc@web.ca, http://rrrncanada.blogspot.com/

 

 

High-Profile Afghan Women’s Rights Activist Submits New Canadian Application

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Canada Rejects High-Profile Afghan Women’s Rights Activist, Leaving her at Lethal Risk; Immigration Officer Failed to Properly Assess Application for Protection

 

Despite the clearly-defined risk of being forcibly returned to torture and death in Afghanistan, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has rejected an application for protection by leading Afghan women’s rights defender Farzana Adell Ghadiya, who formerly worked as Chief of Staff for the UN High Commission on Women in Kabul.

 

As a persecuted women’s rights activist, Hazara minority, and Ismaili Muslim – a combination that makes her a priority target of the Taliban – Adell Ghadiya had applied for a Temporary Resident Permit for Protection (TRP) given that she meets all the qualifications under the humanitarian program for Afghan refugees. It is a perfectly legitimate route for refugees to get to Canada (one often employed successfully by the Rural Refugee Rights Network), but IRCC failed to read her application materials and issued a boilerplate rejection usually sent to applicants for a temporary resident visa, a document that is time-limited and premised on the likelihood that the visitor will return to their country of origin.

 

But Farzana did not apply for a temporary resident visa. She applied for a TRP.

 

Advocates and supporters are calling on Immigration Minister Sean Fraser to immediately intervene and exercise his legally mandated discretion to provide Farzana with a Temporary Resident Permit as a path to safety and permanent residence.

 

“It’s shocking that the IRCC didn’t even take the time to read her affidavit and submissions, which lay out the threats to her life and the obstacles Farzana and many Afghans face in getting to Canada,” explains Matthew Behrens of the Rural Refugee Rights Network. “It’s a fundamental breach of fairness to assess an application as something it isn’t. It shows how little value the lives of Afghan women have for the Canadian government, which had no trouble getting almost 80,000 Ukrainians here in 6 months but has barely brought 20,000 Afghans here in 14 months. Minister Fraser must issue her a permit immediately before she winds up in a Taliban dungeon or six feet under.”

 

Farzana’s work building girls’ schools and maternity hospitals and starting educational programs drew significant Taliban threats through her years in Afghanistan, resulting in a 2013 beating so severe that she was left for dead, suffering pain to this day from a leg injury and two ruptured discs sustained in that beating. Her work as Chief of Staff for the UN High Commission on Women from 2016-2017 also places her in the gun sights of the Taliban.

 

In addition to over 30,000 supporters on a change.org petition, Farzana enjoys a strong support community of women in Ottawa, who speak with her on a regular basis and send money to keep her going in a third country where she is in hiding due to fears of being swept up in frequent street roundups and forcibly returned to her death in Afghanistan.

 

“I have a free room waiting for her in my home and we have a group who are willing to provide for all of her needs until she is fully settled,” says Bessa Whitmore, a professor emerita from Carleton University. “It simply boggles my mind that some bureaucrat failed to open her file, read it accurately, and approve it.”

 

Sharen Craig, who speaks daily with Farzana, is equally appalled at the manner in which Farzana’s file has been dismissed. “In many ways, she is the face of the failure of this government’s program to bring Afghan refugees here,” she says. “Farzana speaks out despite the risk to herself, not only on her own behalf but for all Afghans facing the brutality of the new regime in Kabul. But what does it take to get her here? We have spoken with so many MPs, there’s been so much attention to her case, and yet all we get is a brick wall of rejection. I am up every night worried with fear for my lovely friend, whom I truly feel has become like a daughter to me.”

 

Despite her disappointment, Adell Ghadiya feels hopeful that pressure from Canadians will turn this negative ruling around. “I really believe that if Mr. Fraser read my file, he would approve it,” she says. “I have seen so much love and kindness from Canadians supporting me and so many other Afghan people seeking safety, and I put my faith and trust in them to continue speaking up so that we can find the protection we need.”

 

For more information contact tasc@web.ca or (613) 300-9536.

 

Rural Refugee Rights Network

2583 Carling Ave., Unit M052

Ottawa, ON K2B 7H7

(613) 300-9536, tasc@web.ca, http://rrrncanada.blogspot.com/


Monday, January 3, 2022

Join the 15th for Family Reunification Campaign! Make Visible and End the Invisible Crisis of Family Separation

  


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Refugees and migrants should always be treated with respect and dignity, and in accordance with existing international law.  Children must not be traumatized by being separated from their parents.  Family unity must be preserved.” – UN Secretary-General António Guterres, June 18, 2018

 

“We are the people you do not see. We are the ones who drive your cabs, we clean your rooms...” – Okwe, Dirty Pretty Things

 

JOIN/ORGANIZE MONTHLY FAMILY REUNIFICATION VIGILS

Beginning February 15, 2022, join us on the 15th of every month as we gather for peaceful, public vigils in our communities to demand immediate reunification of hundreds of thousands of long-separated refugee, immigrant, and citizen families; build networks of mutual support while sharing personal stories and discussing legal strategies; and seek institutional change to end the cruel, racist limbo imposed on millions of people for whom “temporary” status, total lack of status, and family separation result in endless pain, fear, and suffering. (Details on how you can arrange a vigil are below!)

 

The Rural Refugee Rights Network and Voices4Families strongly believe that it is critical to expose and end the silent suffering endured by those who, due to institutional indifference, racism, and misplaced political priorities, are unable to enjoy the internationally and domestically guaranteed legal right to live together as family. By coming together in public venues (offices of the federal government, MPs, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, aka IRCC, and high-profile public squares), holding large pictures of long-separated loved ones, sharing stories of the mind-numbingly ridiculous reasons that have been used to justify arbitrary and unaccountable denial of visas, and building networks of support based on a commonly shared trauma, we believe we can put additional pressure on a federal government whose sweet tweets on reunification have no basis in reality.

 

We live in a society that is by its very nature disempowering and disconnecting. We are told from an early age that you can’t fight city hall, you can’t change anything, no one will listen, you need millions of people on your side. We are also told that if you have a problem, it is always your fault, you are to blame, and don’t air your dirty laundry. We are made to feel guilty or selfish if we demand rights that we deserve. But these are all myths used by the powerful to convince us there is no point in trying, even as history shows us otherwise. The words of the great abolitionist Frederick Douglass ring loudly over a century later: If there is no struggle, there is no progress….Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.” Anthropologist Margaret Mead echoed that sentiment, reminding us: “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.”

 

The Scale of the Problem

The Toronto Star reports that as of July 31, 2021, more than 561,700 people were awaiting permanent residence, and 748,381 had a pending temporary residence application as students, workers or visitors while the backlog for citizenship stood at 376,458 people. Le Droit reported in May, 2021 that the average processing time for permanent residence applications that could reunite long-separated families was 39 months. It is so bad that even the Liberals ran on a platform that recognized the need for a program to issue visas to spouses and children abroad while they wait for the processing of their permanent residency application, so that families can be together sooner.”

 

The failure to prioritize families was illustrated yet again with the Liberal government’s proposed immigration levels for 2021-23, in which Canada projects twice as many economic/business immigrants as family reunification numbers (and with refugees accounting for 75% fewer spots than economic immigrants)

 

Family separation is also a public health crisis. It is played out in emergency rooms and medical clinics every day: countless thousands who have not been able to hug their spouses or kids or parents for years are trying to beat back the wave of deep depression, anxiety, and suicide attempts while suffering stress-induced physical maladies. Their nights are full of tears and heart palpitations, trying to maintain relationships through phone apps and choppy videos, compulsively checking the IRCC portal for signs of progress on their files, fearful that taking public action will push their file deeper into the abyss indefinite separation.

 

Happy political photo-ops to the contrary, Canada is not a country that prioritizes the welcoming of families. Instead, it privileges wealthy and business-class immigrants while it relies on the precarity of migrant workers, the under-the-table economy staffed by hundreds of thousands without status, and the fear of speaking up as a means of exploiting a cheap labour force. Refugees and immigrants are not seen as human beings fleeing persecution and abominable living conditions, but rather as impersonal tools whose only use is for economic strategy and “labour market” placeholders.

 

While Canada as a nation has been challenged to reckon with the genocidal roots of its founding – a country build on the forced separation of Indigenous families – we are similarly called to eradicate the racism and cruelty that are embedded in immigration bureaucracies and result in unspeakable amounts of stress, suffering, and trauma. While this campaign cannot solve all the problems associated with the huge structural barriers that make this country a less than welcoming place for far too many, we believe that the public awareness, education, advocacy, and mutual support arising from it will contribute to the broader discussions about and efforts to institute the types of major change necessary to ensure an end to these abusive practices.  

 

Institutional Barriers

Part of the problem is that Canada employs twice as many people on the enforcement end of immigration – working to deport the most vulnerable back to the countries they fled ­– than it does to facilitate their entry.   Indeed, some 14,000 people work day and night at Canadian Border Services Agency to meet arbitrary deportation quotas, throw refugees into prison on the flimsiest of grounds (in 2019/20, over 8,800 refugees were detained without charge, including 136 children), and work overseas to prevent migrants from getting here in the first place. By contrast, IRCC has just over 7,000 workers, many of whom tend to play a role similar to CBSA, finding excuses to delay or reject applications in a work environment that its own employees say is rank with racism.

 

A 2021 report on IRCC’s work culture found that “significant proportions of racialized employees consider racism to be a problem within the department,” pointing to hurtful comments, “blatantly racist tropes,” and “racial biases in the application of IRCC’s programs, policies and client service that are believed to result from implicit biases among decision makers, as well as administrative practices that introduce biases or the potential for bias over time.” These focus groups also pointed to “a deep imbalance in racial representation in management that inherently militates against progress on dealing with racism in the department.”

           

That racism is often exhibited in the very overseas visa posts that are apparently tasked with the Afghan refugee crisis. As one participant noted in the focus group, they “decided not to accept any postings to countries in the region their ancestors came from, as the emotional toll of being exposed repeatedly to racist comments against people of their background had become too heavy.”

 

NEXT STEPS

Every community across this land has individuals and families who suffer from these abusive government practices. There are also advocates who are willing to work alongside of those whose suffering voices need to be shared and magnified. We are encouraging anyone directly affected alongside those who believe such abuses must end to plan public vigils at the place and time of day of your choosing on the 15th of every month. February 15 marks the day after any provinces celebrates Family Day.

 

A public vigil is a perfectly legal undertaking for which no permit is required. You have a Charter right to assemble and express yourselves. How you organize a vigil is completely up to you. You can have a speak-out in which families share their stories of separation, governmental barriers, and political negligence. You can stage theatre pieces, read poetry, sing songs, hold large signs with pictures of your separated loved ones. Invite the media. Encourage members of local churches, student groups, and more to attend with you. If you have never done something like this before and need some help with ideas on how to approach it, let us know and we’d love to hear from you and talk it through. If you are prepared to commit to gathering on the 15th as much as you can during 2022, please let us know as we build this network of support and solidarity. You can reach us at tasc@web.ca

 

Together, let’s end the suffering of family separation while challenging a system that, absent major overhaul, will continue to perpetuate this misery.

 

The Rural Refugee Rights Network

2583 Carling Ave., Unit M052

Ottawa, ON K2B 7H7

tasc@web.ca, (613) 300-9536, http://rrrncanada.blogspot.com/

 https://www.facebook.com/Rural-Refugee-Rights-Network-105352081349200

 

Voices4Families

https://www.facebook.com/groups/voices4families

admin@voices4families.ca
403 966-1820

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, December 20, 2021

No Room at Canada’s Inn for Afghan Refugees

 

With all the experience of Canada’s remarkable network of grass roots groups, community organizations, sponsorship agreement holders, and refugee advocates, IRCC has played its cards close to its chest, shutting out many expert individuals and networks who could facilitate this process. IRCC also keeps repeating that the unavailability of flights out of Kabul and an alleged lack of capacity among “referral partners” are primary reasons for delay, but those excuses mask the reality that there is plenty of space to get this rescue operation expedited. 

 

 

By Matthew Behrens

            It’s been 47 years since Toronto Workshop Productions opened a Jack Winter play about the impossible barriers facing Chilean refugees trying to escape the Pinochet dictatorship and get to Canada. The play’s title, You Can’t Get There From Here, might well apply a half century later to the tens of thousands of Afghans hiding out from the Taliban, languishing in unsafe third countries, and wondering if they have been gaslit by a Canadian government that promised safety and asylum, but which only provides auto-generated emails acknowledging receipt of their increasingly desperate inquiries.

            In 2015, when Justin Trudeau’s Liberals ran on a platform to rapidly welcome thousands of Syrian refugees (contrasting itself with the mean-spirited Harper regime), they initiated a program to land 25,000 people in 100 days. Back then, it was sunny ways and the anti-Harper. But Trudeau’s 2021 election promise to offer asylum to 40,000 Afghans felt more like a rearguard motion to cover for Canada’s 12-year failure to provide safe haven for interpreters, translators, fixers, and others whose lives remain at risk because of their past association with the Canadian occupation.

            In fact, 130 days after the first announced commitment to resettle Afghan refugees who had assisted Canada during the occupation, fewer than 10% of them have arrived in Canada. There are two dozen people from the Canadian embassy’s law firm in Kabul who remain stranded there as well.

Many grass roots groups, sponsorship organizations, and lawyers daily receive new emails pleading for help. Most are from individuals who meet the qualifications for Canada’s program to assist women’s rights defenders, human rights organizers, persecuted ethnic and religious minorities, LGBTQ+ individuals, and journalists. The plea  is always the same: must they die waiting even when they clearly meet the requirements?

 

Killed Waiting for Canada’s Help

            Canada’s sick answer to that painful question, unfortunately, is yes. On the evening of December 10 – International Human Rights Day – a 10-year-old girl named Nazifa, whose family had been approved for resettlement to Canada, was shot dead in Kandahar. A spokesperson for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) Minister Sean Fraser called this death “tragic and heartbreaking.” While Fraser himself added that the killing would “shock the conscience of every Canadian,” both failed to take any responsibility for it, or to acknowledge that it was painfully predictable.

Kynan Walper, a spokesperson for a group of Canadian veterans and interpreters, Aman Lara (Pashto for “sheltered path”), told Global News, “There was a 10-year-old girl who was shot … when she should have been on her way to Canada. This was avoidable and it was bound to happen, and it’s going to happen more. We need to do better, and I understand that everyone’s trying, but we need to do better, we need to pick this up…whether it be through flights, whether it be through ground movements, whether it be through co-operation with other countries, we need to continue this with a renewed urgency so this does not happen again.”

To make matters worse, Minister Fraser’s racist rants about the Taliban are not endearing Canadian officials to the new regime in Afghanistan. Tragically, the Taliban are the only game in town, but name-calling and insults will only harm those refugees trying to leave the country on their way to Canada. “If [the Taliban] wanted to help us, which they don’t, I don’t think they’d be very good at it,” Fraser fulminated.

While the Taliban’s practices and violence are certainly vile, they are hardly an unsophisticated, unorganized group who are incapable of negotiation and cutting agreements. They sat in lengthy negotiations with the Trump administration in Doha, and President Joe Biden repeatedly declared in an August 20, 2021 press conference that his administration was in constant contact with Taliban officials, and that they had struck agreements to allow evacuation flights. And just last weekend, the Taliban announced they would resume the issuance of travel documents. But Canada’s belligerent rhetoric is hardly opening a door to the kinds of agreements this country is capable of striking if there is the political will to do so. (Indeed, when two white male Canadian diplomats were held hostage by Al-Qaeda in 2009, Canada appeared to have no problems negotiating a $1.1 million ransom.)

 

Grass Roots Groups Shut Out

But what should really shock the conscience of Canadians is that Fraser’s own IRCC is not “very good at it” when it comes to answering the pleas of Afghan refugees. With all the experience of Canada’s remarkable network of grass roots groups, community organizations, sponsorship agreement holders, and refugee advocates, IRCC has played its cards close to its chest, shutting out many expert individuals and networks who could facilitate this process. IRCC also keeps repeating that the unavailability of flights out of Kabul and an alleged lack of capacity among “referral partners” are primary reasons for delay, but those excuses mask the reality that there is plenty of space to get this rescue operation expedited.

Indeed, on December 7, NDP Immigration critic Jenny Kwan called for emergency immigration measures in the House of Commons, pointing out, “According to the government’s own website, ‘Canada and its allies have received assurances from the Taliban that Afghan citizens with travel authorization from other countries will be allowed to leave Afghanistan.’ Canada must not squander this small window of opportunity given the dire situation in Afghanistan. The NDP is therefore calling on the government to bring in an emergency immigration measure of utilizing temporary residence permits to help Afghans get to safety.”          

The Rural Refugee Rights Network (the author coordinates the group), which has successfully reunited dozens of refugee families using such permits, has heard from scores of Afghans both within and outside of the country. They range from women’s rights activists to the long-persecuted members of the Hazara ethnic group and former non-governmental organization (NGO) workers. As a potential “referral partner,” the network has plenty of complete files with everything needed to expedite temporary resident permits.

But Ottawa is not returning phone calls or emails. For groups like the long-established Canadian Women for Women in Afghanistan, the experience is similar. Their executive director, Lauryn Oates, told the Globe and Mail, “Even just communicate, send a reply that says: Look, we’re gonna do our best to give you an answer by the end of December, so people have something. It seems to be a failure of bureaucracy and an inability to adapt to an emergency … the needs of human beings who are real people with real families who just want to know what the hell is going to happen to them.”

 

“Why Can’t You Prioritize Us?”

One of the families working with the Rural Refugee Rights Network submitted all required information to the Canadian government last August. Well-trained in finance and administration and a father of three young kids, “Hussain” worked for almost a decade with a variety of Canadian-funded organizations that provided mentoring and research to assist policewomen, War Child Canada’s Evaluation of Afghan Women’s Community Support Program, the Aga Khan Foundation, the United Nations Development Program, World University Service of Canada, and the Canadian International Development Agency.

When I spoke with Hussain last week, he expressed disappointment that his family remains stuck in a crowded Netherlands refugee camp as he continues to spend hours on the IRCC website and make phone calls to the Afghanistan hotline. He is equally distressed that he has not received any support from the NGOs for which he risked his life working for close to a decade, with one representative unhelpfully replying that Hussain should to try engage with the unresponsive IRCC.

Despite the barriers put up both by government and the NGO world, Hussain remains hopeful that, by sharing his story, families like his and many others in limbo will receive enough support from grass roots people across Canada that Ottawa will finally speed up what should be an easy process to finalize.

“I lost everything because of what happened, and now we are stuck here,” he told me. “I’m young, I can work, I won’t be dependent on anyone. The scope of my work experience is wide. Why can’t you prioritize us?”

Hussain has seen other families suddenly getting the word that they could get on a plane, but he has received no answer as to why his application, which meets all the requirements for quick entry to Canada, sits idle. He worries because his kids are losing weight –  there is no culturally appropriate food made available to them – and he knows of some refugees who have waited in the camps for as long as 8 years to get housing in the Netherlands.

“Canada has everything they need to know all about us,” Hussain says. “We have so much to contribute. We are in the Netherlands. There are not the security issues we saw at the Kabul airport that would prevent us from getting on a plane. We are fully vaxxed, we are ready to be relocated. What is holding things up?”

On top of the stress of limbo, Hussain and his family also have traumatic memories of the scramble to leave the country, which entailed a nail-biting, last-minute dash to the airport, tense negotiation while standing knee-deep in the sewage ditch surrounding the Kabul airport, and trying to calm his children by explaining that the roar of military jets and sounds of gun and mortar fire were wedding celebrations.

 

We Never Slept Well

Like many in his shoes, Hussain was at constant risk from the Taliban, even during the Canadian and NATO occupation, for engaging in NGO work. Indeed, in 2017 he received a notorious Taliban “night letter” (a form of intimidation that threatens the recipient for working with “the crusaders”), which forced his family to relocate. “They told me they knew I was working with non-governmental organizations, that I was dealing with money,” he said, noting this left him open to threats of extortion and violence. As the Taliban entered Kabul, he destroyed the letter, knowing he was doomed if he were captured with it on his person. Even before the dramatic events of August 2021, living in the country was always fraught with tension. “Many people were targeted for killing, and we never slept well,” he recalled. “Every day I thought, this is our last day, and yes, the fear was always there.” 

While Afghan families both inside and outside of Afghanistan express their frustration, there is a long line-up of professionals and volunteers alike on the other end of the equation wanting to facilitate the process but continuing to hit brick walls.

I was looking forward to being part of various Afghanistan pro bono initiatives that dedicated volunteers have organized, in an effort to use my legal knowledge to help vulnerable populations seek refuge in our country,” explains immigration lawyer Sheela Gupta. “Unfortunately, my skill set, along with those of other lawyers who are driven to help in whatever way they can, are not being used. My efforts mainly consist of responding to desperate pleas from Afghans, received on a daily basis. I have a boilerplate response which I use more often than I'd like, that explains their ineligibility for government programs and expresses the hope that additional resettlement programs may be introduced in the future.”

            Even when her clients match the requirements for Canada’s Afghan refugee program, Gupta notes that “there are inconsistencies in how applications are accepted for processing. …I've lost hope on additional resettlement programs being introduced anytime soon, but I do hope that IRCC is instructed to process applications in queue more expeditiously, especially given that so many applicants are in hiding from the Taliban or are in other countries without legal status.”

 

Canada’s Anti-Migrant Bias

            Part of the problem is that Canada employs twice as many people on the enforcement end of immigration – working to deport the most vulnerable back to the countries they fled ­– than it does to facilitate their entry.   Indeed, some 14,000 people work day and night at Canadian Border Services Agency to meet arbitrary deportation quotas, throw refugees into prison on the flimsiest of grounds (in 2019/20, over 8,800 refugees were detained without charge, including 136 children), and work overseas to prevent migrants from getting here in the first place. By contrast, IRCC has just over 7,000 workers, many of whom tend to play a role similar to CBSA, finding excuses to delay or reject applications in a work environment that its own employees say is rank with racism.

A 2020 report on IRCC’s work culture found that “significant proportions of racialized employees consider racism to be a problem within the department,” pointing to hurtful comments, “blatantly racist tropes,” and “racial biases in the application of IRCC’s programs, policies and client service that are believed to result from implicit biases among decision makers, as well as administrative practices that introduce biases or the potential for bias over time.” These focus groups also pointed to “a deep imbalance in racial representation in management that inherently militates against progress on dealing with racism in the department.”

            That racism is often exhibited in the very overseas visa posts that are apparently tasked with the Afghan refugee crisis. As one participant noted in the focus group, they “decided not to accept any postings to countries in the region their ancestors came from, as the emotional toll of being exposed repeatedly to racist comments against people of their background had become too heavy.”

            Critically for Afghan applicants suffering the endless wait under trying conditions, the report also found “some of the overt and subtle racism [IRCC employees] have witnessed by both employees and decision makers can and probably must impact case processing. Some point to differences in refusal rates by country as an indicator that some form of bias must be at play.”

In addition, the report found that established practices meant to reflect departmental policies “have taken on discriminatory undertones for the sake of expediency or performance,” pointing to discriminatory rules for processing immigration applications from some countries or regions that are different than for others (e.g., demanding additional financial document requirements for applications from Nigeria). They also expressed concern that increased automation of processing “will embed racially discriminatory practices in a way that will be harder to see over time.”

 

No Room at the Inn

            The self-advocacy group Voices 4 Families has recently pointed to examples in rejections for spousal sponsorships as rooted in that very racism, noting that, among other factors, explanations for turning down a spouse can include a woman who is older than her husband, the woman is a divorcee, a woman who is not white is married to a white man, the wedding size was small, the couple have mixed religious backgrounds, and because the couple have different levels of education.

            When Trudeau first came to power, his government blamed everything wrong with the immigration system on Harper. That excuse, while certainly justified, could only last so long (notably, much of the damage was also done during the Chretien/Martin years too). Then along came Covid, a catch-all excuse to further rationalize unacceptable processing delays, even though the processing of immigration files can be done online from any location on the planet. Now, families who have been waiting years for reunification are told the Afghan refugee crisis has taken up all the priority staff time. But with such poor numbers of resettled Afghan refugees, many wonder if that too is just another excuse to cover an institutional failure.

            IRCC Minister Fraser, meanwhile, is playing by the classic Trudeau script, acknowledging the pain he feels while refusing to come up with immediate, bold, and perfectly realizable solutions. When asked by the Globe and Mail if he appreciates that lives are on the line, Fraser replied: “That’s the kind of thing that you think about when you go to bed at night and you ask yourself, ‘Am I bringing the level of dedication and talent to this job that the magnitude of the task demands?’ And I hope to God I do.”

While heavenly judgment has yet to be rendered for Fraser, the verdict has long been posted in every auto-generated letter from Canadian immigration authorities to fearful Afghans wondering whether that invitation to come to Canada was all just a cruel joke. In the spirit of the season, it clearly tells them: No Room at the Inn.