Ottawa: Canada will continue to accept asylum seekers crossing illegally from the United States but will ensure security measures are taken to keep Canadians safe, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Tuesday.
The number of would-be refugees crossing into Canada at isolated and unguarded border crossings has increased in recent weeks amid fears that US President Donald Trump will crack down on illegal immigrants, and photos of smiling Canadian police greeting the migrants have gone viral.
Opposition Conservatives want Trudeau's centre-left Liberal government to stem the flow of asylum seekers from the United States because of security fears and a lack of resources to deal with them.
"One of the reasons why Canada remains an open country is Canadians trust our immigration system and the integrity of our borders and the help we provide people who are looking for safety," Trudeau told Parliament.
rigorous system and accepting people who need help."
The reassurance comes as the country announced it will resettle 1200 Yazidi refugees facing genocide at the hands of Islamic State in Iraq, the Agence France-Press reported.
Yazidi women and children would arrive on commercial flights at a "controlled pace" to avoid overwhelming Canada's refugee system.
Mr Hussen also told Reuters Canada would continue to honour the Canada-US Safe Third Country Agreement, which requires it to turn back refugees if they make asylum claims at Canadian border crossings with the US. Refugee advocates have argued this drives asylum seekers to cross illegally at isolated locations, risking their lives in frigid weather.
Amnesty International and other groups are pressuring the Canadian government to abandon the agreement, arguing the United States is not safe for refugees. US President Donald Trump on Tuesday announced measures to deport thousands of undocumented migrants.
Last week, a family of eight from Sudan crossed the border under the noses of US officers who didn't stop women and children from scrambling in the snow to reach Canada.
bolstered their presence at the Quebec border and that border authorities had created a temporary refugee centre to process the asylum seekers.
The number of people making refugee claims at Quebec-US border crossings more than doubled from 2015 to 2016. Last month, 452 people made claims in Quebec compared with 137 in January 2016.
The influx is straining resources in the western prairie province of Manitoba and in Quebec, where taxis drop asylum seekers off metres away from the border, the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) said.
The right-leaning Conservative opposition have called on Canadian authorities to hand illegal immigrants over to US authorities, but Hussen said Canada can honour its refugee agreement with the United States while helping asylum seekers who enter the country illegally.
Reuters
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