Migrants, asylum seekers face uphill battle to legally enter Canada and U.S., experts say - Action News
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Manitoba

Migrants, asylum seekers face uphill battle to legally enter Canada and U.S., experts say

In the wake of the discovery of four people, including an infant, found frozen while attempting to cross the Manitoba-U.S. border, a Winnipeg lawyer says some migrants may make the move south because of Canada's "broken" immigration system.

Wait to legally immigrate to U.S. more than 10 years for some Indian nationals

RCMP officers found the bodies of four people in a field in Manitoba near the Canada-U.S. border a week ago. (Submitted by RCMP)

In the wake of the discovery of four people, including a baby, found frozen after attempting to cross the Manitoba-U.S. border, a Winnipeg lawyer says some migrants may make the move south because of Canada's "broken" immigration system.

It's not known what prompted the group that died near Emerson, Man., nor the seven others who went on ahead to make the perilous journey, butShimonSegal, a criminal defence andimmigration lawyer at the firm of Gindin Segal in Winnipeg, said they might have encountered considerablechallenges trying to settlein Canada.

"This is not a good time to be a refugee or an asylum seeker, whether you're coming through a field or otherwise," he said.

One reason might be the 2019 amendment to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,which stipulates thatrefugee claimants who have previously made a claim for refugee protection in another country will be ineligible to make a claim in Canada.

Refugee claimsby people who alreadyhave made unsuccessful claims hereor who have been granted refugee protection elsewhereare also inadmissible. Others aredeemed inadmissible because of their criminal records.

Eight migrants from Somalia walked across the border into Emerson, Man. in 2017. Now in 2022, Shimon Segal says people seeking asylum in Canada will have a very challenging time doing so. (John Woods/Canadian Press)

"People get here with a thought that Canada is the fair place, and then they find out from someone like me, you're just not eligible. So that's the part that I find really disturbing that isn't being talked about," Segal said.

Meanwhile, people like smugglers might take advantage of desperation and naivet, he said.

"These are survivors, these are people who have skills way beyond their education in order to keep themselves alive. The one thing that they don't get often is accurate information about what they really need to know when they get here," Segal said.

Steve Shand, 47, of Florida is facing human smuggling charges related to the crossing of the seven Indian nationals, but was granted release from custody with a number of conditions.

The charges have not been tested in court.

Autopsies have begun to determine the identiesof the four people found dead in a snow-swept Manitoba field and confirm the causeof the deaths.

RCMP are working with U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Vaibhav Jha, a journalist with the Indian Express newspaper in India whohas been reporting on the deaths,said it is believed the family is from a village called Dingucha, in the state of Gujarat in western India.

A family of four who recently flew to Canada have been listed as missing and their descriptions matchthe people found frozen last week, Jha told CBC's The Current.

It's not uncommon for people in the village to journey to Canada or the U.S. and try for "a better livelihood," he said.

In a recent trip to Dingucha as part of his reporting, Jha found almost half of the houses in the village were locked because the families had moved to the U.S. or Canada.

Even though Dingucha is described as an affluent middle-class community, people there are drawn to North America by the great American dream, Jha said.

There has been a trend since about 1990 of people from Gujarat, with good jobs, leaving behind everything they have in India to make a name for themselves in Canada or the United States, he said.

Subsequent generations then set out to meet up with those relatives.

"There are people from their own community, their own village that have already settled in over there. And these [new] people, they expect their own community people to help them out when they reach the U.S. or Canada," Jha said.

Many don't realize how dangerous the conditions can be, he said.

Jhaexpects this latest case to prompt closer scrutiny by Indian police of illegal traffickers, but he's not sure it will stem the desire of others. The pandemic has hit the Indian economy hard and put more allure in the American dream, he said.

An investigator with Homeland Security said in an affidavit after Shand was initially taken into custody that he was suspected of being involved in a wider human smuggling operation.

VeenaIyer, executive director of the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, said some of her clients have tried to go through legal channels to immigrate to the U.S. but have been deterred by exceptionally long wait lists.

Indian nationals who are close relatives of U.S. citizens have to wait over a decade to immigrate to the U.S. because of nationality-based quotas in the U.S., also known as country limits.

Veena Iyer is the executive director of the Immigrant Law Centre of Minnesota, the largest provider of free immigration legal services in the state. (Zoom)

The country limits mean different nationalitiesmust waitinlines that move at different speeds, so Iyer speculates that the family who froze to death may have pursued that avenue first.

As a general rule, people make perilous journeys for good reasons, Iyer said.

"Fundamentally, it's about potentially saving the lives of their children, and unfortunately, in the case of this family, in trying to do that whether it's economically, whether it's to save them from violence, unfortunately, their children perished," Iyer said.

"Families shouldn't have to do this."

Because both countries make it difficultfor those wanting to migrateor claim refugee status, people are prone to being preyed upon with misinformation, Iyer said.

"Not just in India, but in so many places, there are people who are making promises that cannot be kept about the ability to get somebody to the United States safely, to be able to get them a visa," Iyer said.

"Unfortunately, people are just so desperatethat folksbelieve in those individuals, even though what they are promising issnake oil."

With files from Darren Bernhardt