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UN praises Canada for refugee resettlement program

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Canada was lauded Monday for resettling a record number of refugees in 2016 and called upon to open its doors wider to let in their loved ones left behind.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 24/04/2017 (2233 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Canada was lauded Monday for resettling a record number of refugees in 2016 and called upon to open its doors wider to let in their loved ones left behind.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) praised Canada for welcoming 46,700 refugees in 2016. It’s the largest number of refugees admitted in one year since the implementation of the 1976 Immigration Act, the UNHCR said in a news release.

“This is a tremendous achievement which reflects Canada’s longstanding tradition of welcoming refugees and assisting them with their integration into Canadian society,” Jean-Nicolas Beuze, the UNHCR’s Canada representative, said in a news release.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES The Al Ali family arrived in Winnipeg in December, four years after fleeing war in Syria. They were sponsored by the South Osborne Syrian Refugee Initiative.

“Without this support, scores of refugees would have been left in life-threatening situations and without any hope. Canada has again shown the world that successful resettlement is possible, particularly when government and civil society work together.”

One of Canada’s largest private sponsors of refugees, Winnipeg’s Hospitality House Refugee Ministry, said it’s a “remarkable achievement” that reflects the government’s willingness to resettle a record number of refugees and the efforts of thousands of Canadian volunteers.

“Canadians are a compassionate people, and once again this shows it,” said Hospitality House executive director Tom Denton.

“It’s wonderful we brought in all these people, but we didn’t give a thought to now that they’re here, they want to bring in their families. The continuing tragedy is that these 46,700 newcomers will now want to bring in their refugee families, and Canada’s rules offer no specific way to do this. There has been no way to sponsor one’s relatives for a quarter century, other than through the private sponsorship of refugees program that in 2017 is restricted to 7,500 refugees. The need is at least 10 times that.”

Last year, Canada’s refugee resettlement increased 130 per cent over 2015, in large part from welcoming Syrian refugees.

Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, Ahmed Hussen, said Monday that Canada is “proud to work with UNHCR to bring vulnerable refugees to our country.

“These newcomers help us build our society, culture and economy in long lasting and enduring ways,” Hussen said in a prepared statement. “Canada hopes to increase global refugee resettlement and support ‎civil society and other jurisdictions to expand resettlement along with developing other solutions for the world’s most vulnerable.”

The UNHCR says only one per cent of the world’s refugees will ever be resettled. In the last 40 years, Canada has welcomed an estimated 700,000 refugees, it said.

carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca

Carol Sanders

Carol Sanders
Legislature reporter

After 20 years of reporting on the growing diversity of people calling Manitoba home, Carol moved to the legislature bureau in early 2020.

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