Friends, supporters rally for B.C. family facing deportation to Mexico - Action News
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British Columbia

Friends, supporters rally for B.C. family facing deportation to Mexico

A school community in New Westminster, B.C., rallied Monday night in support of a couple at risk of being deported to Mexico.

Family of three is applying for permanent resident status after living in Canada for 13 years

Adriana Rosales Contreras and Alberto Vargas Mendez watch as about 50 people rally to support them in New Westminster Monday evening. The couple is facing the threat of deportation to Mexico. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Parents at an elementary school in New Westminster, B.C., gathered Monday evening to show their support for a school family that'sat risk of being deported to Mexico.

Adriana Rosales Contreras and her husband, Alberto Vargas Mendez, came to Canada 13 years ago as refugee claimantsfearing for their lives, according to their immigration lawyer, Amanda Aziz.

On Nov. 30, Rosales Contreras was detained by the Canadian Border Services Agencyafter dropping her daughter off at Lord Tweedsmuir Elementary School, said Omar Chu of the migrant advocacy group Sanctuary Health.

Rosales Contreras was released shortly afterwards, butremoval proceedings are ongoing.

Chu saidthe CBSA is continuing with removal proceedings for Rosales Contrerasand her husband, despite the factthey have ongoing applications for permanent residence and a temporary residence permit.

Rosales Contreras and Vargas Mendez are facing the threat of deportation to Mexico after living in Canada for more than a decade. A group of supporters is trying to convince CBSA and the immigration minister to let them stay in Canada. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Azizsays the application process does not stop a removal proceeding andthe couple hasbeen asked to leave Canada by the beginning of July. If deported, they will take their Canadian-born daughterwith them.

Supporters of the couple are calling on Immigration Minister Sean Fraser to ensure their applications are processed and approved before the removal date.

At their original refugee hearing, the board found the couplefaced real risk in Mexico but did not grant their refugee claim.

Supporters rallied outside Lord Tweedsmuir Elementary School in New Westminster Monday evening. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

"What they were fleeing was some very serious death threats and violence from organized crime groups, along with an inability of the state to protect them," Aziz said.

The couple had no legal representation at the time anddidn't know how to navigate the appeal process, Aziz said. The couple, whose daughter has never been to Mexico, istrying to apply for permanent residentstatus.

CBSAdid notcomment on the case citingprivacy concerns, but said theagency has a legal obligation to remove foreign nationals who have no legal standing to remain in Canada.

People who are subject to enforcement actionhave access to due process, the agency said, and "those being removed have either exhausted, or chosen not to pursue, further legal recourse and have no legal right to remain in Canada."

The New Westminster School District has asanctuary schools policy that aims to give school-aged children access to education without fear oftheir personal information being shared with immigration authorities,regardless of their immigration status.

Chu said CBSA officers monitored the school and arrested Rosales Contrerasafter she droppedher daughter off atschool.

"We feel like this was a huge attack on sanctuary schoolpolicies," he said.

Omar Chu with the migrant advocacy group Sanctuary Health says CBSA officers monitored Rosales Contreras and detained her after she dropped her daughter at school. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

In its statement, the CBSA said "there is no legal restriction preventing the CBSA from carrying out necessary enforcement actions outside a school to execute an arrest warrant."

Chu said the family is very much part of the community. During the COVID-19 pandemic, they helpeddeliverfood to families in need and volunteered with vaccine clinics.

"They shouldn't have to be heroes," Chu said. "The bar isn't that high to be able to come here and seek safety in Canada. But they are. And that just makes it all the more outrageous that we're in this position that we're in."