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The Wrongs of the
Immigration System
Some believe that
the Canadian immigration system is fair and generous. It isn't. And
Stephen Harper and Jason Kenney are swiftly making it even worse.
They are underhandedly taking apart the so-called 'objective'
points-based system. They are moving quickly to get rid of its
'humanitarian' part, the refugee process. In its place, they are
setting up temporary work programs that are designed to push most
migrants in to vulnerable, precarious and temporary jobs without
access to services or the ability to unionize.
In 2008, for the first time, more people arrived on exploitative
temporary work programs than people with some access to permanent
residency!
Major changes have been sneaked through a budget bill and other
seemingly disconnected regulation announcements. Bill C-50 and Bill
C-45 gave powers to the immigration minister and officers to
arbitrarily decide who can come in to Canada and who cannot. The
family reunification program has been modified to actually deter
reunification. Visas have been imposed on Czech Romas and Mexicans.
Deportations have increased with moratoriums on
return lifted for many countries. Only people in 38 professions can
now immigrate to Canada - everyone else is banned. A new clause
within the Temporary Foreign Worker manual means that migrants are
permanently temporary, they can stay indefinitely in Canada without
having to leave to renew their work permit but are unable to apply
for permanent residency.
Kenney is bent on breaking the already dysfunctional refugee system.
Refugee acceptance rates have dropped each year, halved in the last
two decades. Now the Harper government is 'revising' this system.
For the first time, Canada could fast-track rejections of refugee
claimants from 'safe' countries. These 'safe' countries are mostly
those which Canada has trade relations with. The proposed changes
follow a months-long, carefully orchestrated xenophobic campaign,
led by Kenney.
Even those granted citizenship are seemingly never fully recognized
as Canadian. They are excluded and ignored in and by Canada. Maher
Arar, Abousfian Abdelrazik and Suaad Haji Mohamud are three of the
many citizens in whose torture and abuse Canada is complicit.
Canada champions itself as a beacon of progressive immigration and
settlement policy as it moves towards a temporary immigration
system. But, migrants of color earn 40% less than their white
counterparts. In Toronto, the number of immigrants who are poor has
grown by 125%, and almost 60% of poor families are from racialized
groups. Immigrant neighborhoods are underserved and marginalized.
Immigrant families have little access to recognition of credentials
or good jobs, or to services such as affordable childcare.
Many immigrants sacrifice themselves and their aspirations for the
betterment of their children. But often second and third-generation
immigrants remain in exploitative jobs, pushed out of schools and
Universities, unable to fully access opportunities promised.
Even more than immigrants, temporary migrants like farm workers,
live-in caregivers, construction workers, others, face exploitative
and precarious work and living conditions. They pay taxes and build
communities but are unable to access the most basic services.
Migrant workers are not allowed to bring their families.
During the recession, attacks against migrants have greatly
increased. In the last year, immigration enforcement has carried out
large workplace raids and forcibly deported people. The enforcement
arm of immigration targets non-status people that it considers most
vulnerable - women at shelters and people at community gardens.
These tactics push already vulnerable undocumented people into
situations where they face greater risk and exploitation.
The changes to the Canadian immigration system are a violent
continuation of exclusion of migrants. The present Canadian
immigration system, set up by settlers on colonized land engages
with migrants, mostly of color, only to exploit their labor. As we
fight against the recent and coming regressive changes by Harper and
his cronies, we must challenge the entire exclusionary basis of the
immigration systems themselves.
[Source:
No
One Is Illegal]
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