The Canadian Press - ONLINE EDITION
Syrian Canadians despair for relatives trapped by war, call on Kenney to do more
OTTAWA - Every bomb that explodes in Damascus strikes at the heart of a woman in suburban Ottawa, leaving her to wonder why the government here is not helping to get her son out of the besieged Syrian capital.
Leila, not her real name, knows that her 27-year-old son is hiding somewhere in Damascus, trying to keep one step ahead of a security apparatus that has his name on a list of forced conscripts.
If he's found, he could be shot on sight. If he's lucky, he'll be forced into the Syrian army and put on the front lines of a two-year-old civil war in his country that has left 70,000 dead.
"It will be hard for him to kill Syrians. He might be killing a relative or a friend. He keeps saying he doesn't want to go to the military," said Leila, whose real name is being withheld to protect her son from harm in Syria.
"I know it's the law, the immigration law that should be applied on all people. I know there are rules for that. But there should be something for the families here who still have relatives (in Syria)."
Like hundreds of other Syrian Canadians, Leila is angry with the federal Conservative Canadian government, which she accuses of doing nothing to reunite families with their trapped relatives.
Not so, said Immigration Minister Jason Kenney, who expressed concern Friday about the plight of Syrian refugees and promised to do more to help.
Such a sharp difference of opinion is not without political ramifications for the Conservative government: there are an estimated 40,000 Syrian Canadians in Quebec alone and as many 100,000 across the country.
Faisal Alazem, spokesman for the Syrian Canadian Council, said he's been getting complaints like Leila's from families across Canada for the last six months.
Her story, he said, is just one of about 200 from Syrians across Canada who are anxious about their children, parents and other relatives caught inside Syria's borders — part of an estimated three million people displaced internally by the fighting.
Since last fall, Alazem has been pressing for a meeting with Kenney. Last week, he finally got a call back.
Officials — not the minister — would be willing to meet on March 11, Alazem was told, and that Kenney might find some time in his schedule "probably in a couple of months."
That development flows from the meeting last July between Alazem's group and Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, who advised them to take their concerns to Kenney, because reunification is his bailiwick.
"When we look at that here in our diaspora, we really feel failed," Alazem said.
"Our families under bombardment — we're not allowed to bring them. Helping our people ... we are really behind."
Last week, NDP foreign affairs critic Paul Dewar pressed Kenney to meet formally with Syrian Canadian representatives.
"The minister has stonewalled them," Dewar said.
"None of us in the House would want our families left in these conditions. It is a simple request. Will the minister meet with representatives from the Syrian Canadian community?"
At an event Friday in Calgary, Kenney offered a different view. He said he's met with "many different groups" of Syrian Canadians, "probably hundreds" in the last few months.
He said the government is trying to move quickly on 250 pending applications for spousal sponsorship of people still in Syria.
"I can understand the deep anxiety of Canadians who have relatives there, but we at the same time have to be careful," Kenney said.
"There are people over there who have extremist affiliations, and we have to be careful about Canada's national security as well."
Kenney said Canada can not simply airlift people to safety from Syria. Instead, he recommended they flee the country if possible and join their 400,000 fellow Syrians in neighbouring countries, where they can claim refugee status.
"There's a process where if they are facing danger in the conflict, then what they should do is leave Syria and seek the protection of the United Nations in one of the many refugee facilities that are surrounding Syria."
Alazem disputes Kenney's claim that he has met Syrian groups, and said it is unfair to ask Syrians to flee to a third country and be forced to wait months — if not years — in the UN's clogged refugee queue.
In a policy paper, the Syrian Canadian Council is calling on Canada to take special measures to help Syrians as they have in the past with Lebanese people affected by the long civil war that ended in 1990.
Among other things, the council is calling on Canada to admit 10,000 refugees from Syria either through private sponsorship or government resettlement.
"The Lebanese Special Measures which provided priority immigration for tens of thousands during Lebanon's civil war remained in place for sixteen years," the paper states.
Leila called it insensitive and irresponsible to suggest that her son flee Syria "in a dangerous way" and "go to a third country and stay there for two years, maybe more" where she will have to send him money to survive.
"Why do that when he has a family here?" she asked. "We are very good as a family. I need my son here. I need him with us. He is in danger there."
Leila came to Canada four years ago. She has her permanent residency and is on the verge of becoming a citizen. She was allowed to bring her youngest son, then 16, because he was a dependent.
Her eldest — a daughter, now 30 — followed later on a tourist visa issued just before the start of the uprising two years ago.
Leila's middle son was not as lucky. Now he's on the run in Damascus, living in the shadows with a now-pregnant wife.
On Tuesday, when she learned that twin mortars exploded in the heart of Damascus, Leila fired up her laptop and tried to reach her son through Skype and a Facebook account she has under a pseudonym. She had no luck.
"So many cars were destroyed and people were killed," she said.
A day later, her daughter got through, and found out he was fine. Leila tried again to reach him, but with no luck.
The last time she communicated directly with her son was last weekend, for a few fleeting minutes on his cellphone.
"He told me, I'm fine mom, it's ok. There's no Internet, there's no electricity. I'm fine with my wife," Leila said, before bursting into tears.
"Whenever I hear a bomb took place there or any other violent thing, I'm always anxious and worried about him, because you never know. We are very far from him."
Her story is far from unique.
Omar, not his real name, is beside himself in Montreal, trying to figure out a way to get his older brother to Canada. His brother was wounded last year by Syrian security forces in the embattled city of Homs, where he was organizing peaceful demonstrations.
Omar's brother underwent an emergency operation in a field hospital but needs more surgery to remove four bullets from his abdomen.
Omar has tried repeatedly to get a visa for his brother, but has been refused.
"He disappeared inside Homs because if the government catches him they will try again," explained Omar, who is married to a Canadian citizen, and has two young children, also citizens.
Omar said he is willing to sign a letter to the government that makes clear his brother will not apply for refugee status. He just wants him to have surgery in a Canadian hospital, an option that doesn't appear legally possible under Canada's immigration law.
"I'm ready to sign it now — he doesn't have any right to apply for anything."
— With files from Bill Graveland in Calgary
Fact Check
Have you found an error, or know of something we’ve missed in one of our stories? Please use the form below and let us know.
More Canada
- Back to Top
- Return to Canada
More Canada
(1 of 15 articles for today)
Canadian Press NewsAlert: Police make second arrest in test drive death
11:38 AM 0HAMILTON - Hamilton police have made a second arrest in the case of Tim Bosma, a 32-year-old father who was ...
Poll
Most Popular Canada
- Mother cries, yells as driver appears in court charged with killing boy on patio
- Toronto mayor stays silent about alleged crack video as Trudeau, Wynne weigh in
- Duffy expense controversy sent back to closed-door Senate committee
- Ford ducks crack scandal; Trudeau, Wynne do not
- Former RCMP Musical Ride member sues, says colleagues dragged her through feces
- Baird takes the heat, Harper sheds little light on Senate spending scandal
- 'Speculation' in Ontario murder case unfair to accused, says lawyer
- Appointees to EI boards broke guidelines by making political donations
- Carney leaving Bank of Canada with country in a stronger position
- NDP Leader Mulcair says cops wanted to talk to him about meeting with Vaillancourt
- Crack-cocaine video allegations 'ridiculous,' Toronto Mayor Rob Ford says
- Prominent Canadians back petition to rename Victoria Day to honour aboriginals
- Harper to be on hot seat at Tuesday caucus after chief of staff quits
- Baird takes the heat, Harper sheds little light on Senate spending scandal
- Toronto mayor stays silent about alleged crack video as Trudeau, Wynne weigh in
- Duffy bailout by Harper's chief of staff prompts allegations of coverup by PMO
- Duffy quits Conservative caucus over expenses as colleagues began turning on him
- Canadian and American missing for nearly two weeks in Mexico
- Mother cries, yells as driver appears in court charged with killing boy on patio
- A look at the life and career of Ray Novak, prime minister's new chief of staff
- First-degree murder charge to be laid in test drive death; remains badly burned
- Multiple fatalities after serious crash near U.S. border
- Canadian tourist dies after falling from hotel in Mexican resort
- Crack-cocaine video allegations 'ridiculous,' Toronto Mayor Rob Ford says
- Arrest made in case of Hamilton, Ont., man missing after pickup truck test drive
- Engineer charged in mall collapse
- Leaving Saskatoon: police mourn homeless drunk they considered a friend
- Prominent Canadians back petition to rename Victoria Day to honour aboriginals
- Man with no arms plans to fight seatbelt ticket, wants apology from police
- Harper to be on hot seat at Tuesday caucus after chief of staff quits
- Appointees to EI boards broke guidelines by making political donations
- Toronto mayor stays silent about alleged crack video as Trudeau, Wynne weigh in
- U.S. ambassador to Canada David Jacobson to join BMO in October as vice-chairman
- 'Speculation' in Ontario murder case unfair to accused, says lawyer
- Former RCMP Musical Ride member sues, says colleagues dragged her through feces
- Mother cries, yells as driver appears in court charged with killing boy on patio
- Senate returns to business as usual despite spending scandal
- Toronto, eh? Late-night TV cracks up audiences with jibes at Mayor Rob Ford
- Prominent Canadians back petition to rename Victoria Day to honour aboriginals
- Duffy bailout by Harper's chief of staff prompts allegations of coverup by PMO
- Search on for living creatures far beneath Canadian Shield
- Quake near Ottawa rattles residents across wide swath of Ontario, Quebec
- Conservative senator Duffy claimed expenses while campaigning in 2011 election
- Grade 5 kids urge Harper to drop mean attack ads against Justin Trudeau
- Secret CSIS source, allied intelligence cited in high-profile terror case
- The Gretzky of Gretzky collectors
- Canadian and American missing for nearly two weeks in Mexico
- Hadfield home, but he can't even drive his car
- U.S. bill would give Canadian snowbirds more time to spend in the sun
- 'Revenge of the redheads': Ginger-haired Montrealers gather in celebration
- Man with no arms plans to fight seatbelt ticket, wants apology from police
- Prominent Canadians back petition to rename Victoria Day to honour aboriginals
- Suspects arrested in Via train terror plot linked to al-Qaida in Iran: RCMP
- Leaving Saskatoon: police mourn homeless drunk they considered a friend
- Commanding officer of Canadian Forces base in Alberta charged with sex assault
- Duffy bailout by Harper's chief of staff prompts allegations of coverup by PMO
- Engineer charged in mall collapse
- What's snot OK with eating your own boogers?
Ads by Google











You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.