Canadian Council for Refugees: Paris attacks have countries ramping up security, debating immigration policy Many people involved in helping refugees are concerned the recent focus on Syrians will further delay the applications of non-Syrians trying to come to Canada, according to CBC. Tom Denton, executive director of the Hospitality House Refugee Ministry in Winnipeg, says with the government prioritizing 25,000 Syrian refugees, "Something has to give." And the Canadian Council for Refugees sent a letter to John McCallum, the new minister of immigration, urging the government not to forget refugees in other parts of the world. On Saturday, a senior official in the Prime Minister Office told reporters that Friday night attacks in Paris have not prompted Canada to back down from its promise to accept the Syrian refugees, saying the government will ensure refugees brought to Canada will be chosen in a "safe and responsible" manner to deal with possible security threats. In a statement to CBC News, McCallum says that while "All Syrian resettlement applications and sponsorships are being processed on a priority basis... Other refugee populations continue to be processed as per usual and existing commitments and admission targets will be met." That could be a challenge, says Denton. "The system worldwide was already taxed in terms of the processing of immigration applications, not just refugees." The 25,000 Syrian refugees would be roughly 80 times the number of government-assisted Syrian refugees who arrived in Canada in 2015 before Justin Trudeau became prime minister. 4 urgent issues facing new immigration minister Cabinet commits to 'quick and substantial help' for refugees but gives few details Refugee agencies lost federal money, now trying to ramp up When 24 Syrian refugees arrived in Winnipeg in October, relatives greeted them with signs, hugs and presents. Canada takes in about a quarter-million immigrants each year. Overburdened and overwhelmed Denton explains that the same offices and staff abroad handle all the various immigrant application streams and are already overburdened with work and overwhelmed with applications.
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Tagged under Canadian Council for Refugees, Syrian refugees topics.
16.11.15