Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday was due to announce his plan to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees and he says all 10 of Canada’s provincial premiers support bringing that many in.
Trudeau has not backed down from a pledge to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada by Dec. 31, despite a pushback by some following the deadly terror attacks in Paris.
Details of how the refugees would be transported and where they would be housed were expected to be announced yesterday.
Photo: Reuters
“Everyone agrees that Canada must do more and must welcome 25,000 refugees,” Trudeau said after meeting with provincial leaders late on Monday.
Yesterday’s announcement was sure to raise alarm in the US, where many Republican governors have said they do not want any Syrian refugees.
Trudeau said robust security screening continues to be a high priority.
Quebec Premier Phillipe Couillard said accepting refugees and immigrants is part of Canadian tradition.
“There was no one sitting at the table that is not interested in seeing refugees come,” Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne said.
Canadian Immigration Minister John McCallum said he spoke to the nation’s big city mayors about how they can help resettle the refugees.
Canada has long prided itself on opening its doors wider than any nation to asylum seekers. In times of crisis in decades past, Canada resettled refugees quickly and in large numbers. It airlifted more than 5,000 people from Kosovo in the late 1990s, more than 5,000 from Uganda in 1972 and resettled 60,000 Vietnamese in 1979 and 1980. More than 1.2 million refugees have arrived in Canada since World War II.
Former Conservative Canadian prime minister Stephen Harper, who lost an Oct. 19 election to Trudeau, had declined to resettle more Syrian refugees, despite the haunting image of a drowned three-year-old boy washed up on a Turkish beach that focused global attention on the crisis stemming from the civil war.
The boy had relatives in Canada and the refugee crisis became a major campaign issue.
Brad Wall, the Conservative premier of Saskatchewan province, said he has problems with the deadline of Dec. 31 for security reasons, but believes Canada should welcome the refugees.
More than 4 million Syrians have fled their nation since the conflict began in 2011.
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