Long viewed as a multicultural and inclusive nation, Canada admitted recently that its immigration system is tinged with racism and concern has risen over high rejection rates for African students.
“I have met people who have had their visas refused more than five times,” even though they had been accepted by Canadian universities, said Serge Nouemssi, white coat and pipette in hand.
Originally from Cameroon, the 33-year-old biology student has been working on his doctorate for more than three years in a laboratory at the University of Quebec at Trois-Rivieres.
Photo: AFP
Surrounded by greenery, the campus located halfway between Montreal and Quebec City hosts almost 15,000 students, including the largest proportion of Africans in the province — 65 percent of international students.
However, “we have seen rejections of up to 80 percent of applicants coming from Africa,” the school’s rector, Christian Blanchette, said, adding that it has been an ongoing problem “for several years.”
In a report quietly released at the end of September, the national immigration department said that it “recognizes the presence of racism in Canada and within our own organization.”
According to federal data, Quebec is the province with the highest rejection rate of African students — about 70 percent from French-speaking African nations between 2017 and last year.
The data say applications from France, Britain or Germany to study in Quebec are almost always accepted — about a 90 percent approval rate.
As well as having to pay tuition ranging on average from C$17,000 to C$19,000 (US$12,747 to US$14,247) per academic year to study in Quebec and rising up to C$50,000, African students must also provide financial guarantees.
“For us Africans, generally they [immigration officials] insist on proof of financial means” to be able to afford to live and study in Canada, Nouemssi said.
“There are cases where we have demonstrated financial resources that were close to one million dollar,” said Caroline Turcotte-Brule, an immigration lawyer. “The agent replied that our client did not have enough financial resources.”
“I have the impression that it’s a bit random,” she added, specifying that the reason for refusal is often the same: “A fear that the person will not return to his country of origin after” his studies.
“It’s a bit of hypocrisy,” said Krishna Gagne, another lawyer who noted that students have the legal right to consider staying in Canada after their studies.
Ottawa has even been encouraging foreign students to do so as it rolled out incentives in the past few months to help deal with a labor shortage.
Sitting at her desk in a small laboratory at the end of a maze of underground corridors, Imene Fahmi said that she had to try twice before being able to study in Quebec.
“I encountered a lot of difficulties,” said the Algerian-born doctor, who was refused the first time because the program she had chosen was “not related to her previous studies,” even though she had been aggressively recruited by her research director.
She had to apply a second time and wait eight months before finally getting approvals.
“In regards to immigration, there doesn’t seem to be an understanding of the nuances and backgrounds of certain students, so we have refusals which are a bit absurd,” her research supervisor Mathieu Piche said, unable to hide his frustrations.
Refusals and delays have consequences on the students, but also “on the work of the teachers,” he added.
The problem does not only affect students. In July, Canada faced a backlash over its denials of visas for hundreds of delegates, including Africans, that were to attend the AIDS 2022 conference in Montreal.
In its September report, the government promised better training for its immigration agents, and consider creating an ombudsman post to manage disputes and review its much maligned case processing software.
Those efforts are welcomed by Turcotte-Brule, but she underscores that there has been “a problem of systemic racism for a long time” in Canada and that “it will not be resolved overnight.”
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