Asylum seeker suffers frostbite crossing border as feds' U.S. campaign discourages irregular migration - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 05:27 AM | Calgary | -1.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Asylum seeker suffers frostbite crossing border as feds' U.S. campaign discourages irregular migration

Days before Canada's immigration minister said he doesn't see another surge of asylum seekers on the horizon, Kangni Kouevi became the third asylum seeker to suffer serious frostbite trudging north into Manitoba through snow and blistering cold.

Manitoba town braces for potential asylum-seeker surge Liberals preparing for, but don't think will happen

Kangni Kouevi's hands remain wrapped in bandages after the 36-year-old man suffered serious frostbite walking into Manitoba from the U.S. last week. (Holly Caruk/CBC)

Days before Canada's immigration minister said he doesn't see another surge of asylum seekers on the horizon,Kangni Kouevibecame the third asylum seeker to suffer serious frostbite trudgingnorth into Manitoba through snow and blistering cold.

"It can kill you," the 36-year-old from West Africa, hands wrapped in thick bandages, said Wednesday of the harsh winter conditions he experienced crossing the U.S.-Canada border on foot in search of refuge last week.

This comes as Canada's federal government is conducting a campaign south of the border aimed atdiscouraging asylum seekers from undertaking irregular crossings, and amid concerns about a potential new wave of Salvadoran asylum seekers coming from the U.S.

Kouevi said heleftTogo,his home country, late in 2014 after his family disowned him for converting to Christianity. He says hisfather was a faith healer who threatened to have him killed for rejecting those traditions.

That set off a journey that wound through South America and into the U.S. Itculminated on Friday in a $700 car ride from someoneKouevisays he didn't know,who drove him from Minnesota to the northern edge of North Dakota.

Razak Iyal, 35, and Seidu Mohammed, 24, crossed into Manitoba on a bitterly cold Christmas Eve in 2016. Both had most of their fingers amputated due to frostbite. (CBC)

His hands froze and hardened after wandering in the cold for hours that night, when temperatures near the border dropped to23 C but felt more like33 with wind chill. Hisgloves, hat and jacket weren't warm enough.

Kouevi ducked into a shed in Emerson, thesmall Manitoba border town that has become an asylum-seeker hotspot, to escape the wind before he called RCMP for help on his cellphone.

"I tried to hide. The wind was blowing on my face. I could not handle the cold," he said in French, which a Radio-Canada reporter translated into English.

"I tried to stop cars, but nobody would help me. Iwent to a house, but nobody was there."

Koueviwas a butcher and handyman back home. He doesn't know what he will do if doctors decide to amputate hisfingers, like they were forced to with asylum seekers Razak Iyaland Seidu Mohammed early last year.

Fear of influx

Though few have suffered such severe injuriestrying to cross the border,hundreds have made the risky trek through snowy Prairie fields in recent years.

Immigration Minister AhmedHussensaid Tuesday the number of asylum seekers being intercepted at the Manitoba-U.S. border port in Emerson is "extremely low" right now.

Federal Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen visited Minnesota last month to speak with state Gov. Mark Dayton and dispel myths about crossing into Canada for immigrant communities in that state. (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)

Emerson Reeve Greg Janzenfears that could change, in part, due to President Donald Trump's pledge tosuspendthe temporary protected status of 200,000 Salvadoran immigrantsin the U.S.

The group was originally granted temporary protection status in 2001after two earthquakes left hundreds of thousands homeless in El Salvador.

Those in the U.S. have, until recently, been permitted to work and live in the countrybut the Trump administrationis lifting their protection status as of September 2019, forcing those fromEl Salvador to leave or file for legal residency before then.

"That's the concerning partare they going to head through Emerson?" Janzen said, adding the town has more resources and is generally more prepared than it was last year duringwinter asylum-seeker spikes.

Canada Border Services Agency's most recent public data suggests RCMPintercepted almost as many people at the Manitoba border late in 2017 as they did in 2016. A total of 67 and 38 people were picked up inOctober and November 2017 respectively, down from 66 during each of those months in 2016.Just under 1,000 asylum seekers crossed into Manitobabetween January and November of last year; at least 435 crossed in 2016.

Members of Parliament have been sent to Los Angeles, Dallas, Houston, New York and Miami in recent months to clarify misinformation about Canada's immigration laws.

'Not taking anything for granted'

Hussenvisited Minnesota last month to speak with state Gov.Mark Dayton and dispel myths about crossing into Canada for immigrant communities in that state. It is suspected that many asylum seekers, including those with connections to the Minneapolis Somali community, have travelled from Minnesota at some point on their journeys to Manitoba.

"I went to Minnesota to engage with those communities to make sure that we are still being proactive, we're not taking anything for granted," Hussen said Tuesday.

"And to also inform them that coming to Canada is not a free ticket, that we have laws in place, and to discourage irregular migration, to tell them that is an illegal act, that it is potentially dangerous."

Janzen said he appreciates Hussen'smessage and says it may deter some from eyeing the Manitoba border, though he doesn't really know if it will make a difference.

Asylum seeker suffers frostbite crossing border

7 years ago
Duration 2:26
Days before Canada's immigration minister said he doesn't see another surge of asylum seekers on the horizon, Kangni Kouevi became the third asylum seeker to suffer serious frostbite trudging north into Manitoba through snow and blistering cold.

Janzenalso doubts much will changeunless Canada pulls out of the Safe Third Country agreement, a pact with the U.S. that legally requires asylum seekers to file for refugee status in the first "safe" country they arrive in.

"Other than closing that loophole that's about all he can do," Janzen said. "I don't know of anything else that can be done to slow the flow down, really, of people jumping across the border."

The agreement requires border officials to turn away any prospective refugee claimants who try to cross at official U.S.-Canada customs ports. But if they cross through a field and evadedetection, a United Nationsdeclaration overrides the Safe Third Country Agreement. In such cases, the declaration protects those people from immediate deportation and allows them to file forrefugee status in Canada.

Getting Kouevi settled

KarinGordonis helping Kouevisettle and secure health and immigration documentation so he can take steps toward filing for refugee status.

Karin Gordon, right, is helping Kouevi get settled in Manitoba. (Bert Savard/Radio-Canada)

Gordon took the asylum seekerin Saturday after he was treated at Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre.

"He had been up for about 48 hours he was in shock," said Gordon, executive director of settlement for Hospitality House Refugee Ministry.

Gordon ishelpingKouevichange his dressings and with just about everything else due to his bandagedhands, something she gained experience doing when she cared forRazakIyalandSeiduMohammed, who suffered severe frostbite when they walked across the border on Christmas Eve in 2016.

"I'm used to this drill," she said. "My whole goal here in terms of settling people is to make them become independent."

She said Koueviis currently awaiting more checkups from doctors and possibly a referral to a specialist. He'll soon have a home-care nurse coming to change his dressings, Gordon added.

It's not yet clear whetherKoueviwill need to have some or all of his fingers removed due to frostbite.

"I am scared something [will] happen to my hands," Kouevi said in French."My hands are my freedom."

Walk north of U.S.-Canada border leaves asylum seeker with serious frostbite to hands

7 years ago
Duration 0:57
Asylum-seeker Kangni Kouevi fears he cold lose his fingers after suffering serious frostbite last week. He walked north from the U.S. into Manitoba last week amid temperatures that felt like 33.

With files from Meaghan Ketcheson, Holly Caruk