Friday, April 12, 2024

Canada Denies Entry to Mothers of Canadian Children Detained in Northeast Syria

 

(Children in the Al-Hol concentration camp in Northeast Syria. Photo from Al Sabah) 

 

April 12, 2024 --  Fourteen months after two mothers arbitrarily detained in Northeast Syrian prison camps applied for urgent Temporary Resident Permits that would allow them to come to Canada with their detained Canadian children, Canada has said they are not welcome.

 

                  “We are extremely disappointed that Canada refuses to honour the integrity of these family units, and continues to insist on a policy of forced child separation, which in practice means the children could come here, go into foster care, become separated from their siblings, and likely never again see the only adult who has cared for them since birth,” says one of the lawyers for the mothers, Asiya Hirji. “Telling mothers arbitrarily detained for five years that the price of freedom for your children is for you to remain forever jailed 9,000 kilometres away from them is cruel, inhumane, and not at all in keeping with Canada’s domestic and international human rights obligations towards women, children, and the right to family.”

 

                  Hirji will be filing for a judicial review of the negative decisions, which came on the heels of the March 19 Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic’s  damning indictment of the international failure to repatriate some 30,000 detained children, Punishing the Innocent: Ending Violations against Children in Northeast Syrian Arab Republic (https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/documents/hrbodies/hrcouncil/coisyria/policypapersieges29aywar/2024-03-18-punishing-innocent.pdf). That report found: "The failure to provide even basic medical care, water or food to interned women and children also constitutes a violation of the prohibition of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, which may amount to a war crime,” adding, "Releasing, repatriating and reintegrating children into their home communities, with their mothers, is long overdue.”

 

The rejection of the permits also goes against the clearly enunciated policies of major Canadian allies. On March 15 the governments of France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States released a joint statement (https://www.state.gov/joint-statement-on-the-occasion-of-the-13th-anniversary-of-the-syrian-uprising/) calling on "the international community to rally around the remaining tasks to ensure durable solutions” for the detainees held in prisons and detention camps in Northeast Syria. The U.S. has repeatedly called on its partners to engage in repatriation, with President Joe Biden offering resources to assist in the return of foreign nationals detained in Northeast Syria.

 

There are currently 9 Canadian men, 3 women and 13 Canadian children who are still detained in Northeast Syria; 26 have been returned in seven separate instances. The detained women are non-Canadian mothers of Canadian children who have all applied for temporary resident permits.

 

“Once again, Canada has failed its ‘never again’ promise with respect to forced separation of children from their families,” says Matthew Behrens of Stop Canadian Involvement in Torture, which leads a campaign for repatriation. “We have a shameful legacy of that in this land. We also have a shameful ongoing legacy of racism and Islamophobia, and the rejection of these women with secret, unsourced allegations that may well emanate from torture is clearly illegal and morally reprehensible. Canadian officials have never interviewed these women, and instead rely  on the standard demonization we have seen over the past quarter century of racial and religious profiling in which exaggerated, unfounded claims have contributed to illegal detention and torture. If there is evidence of wrongdoing, you don’t compound that by keeping these traumatized women and children in jail forever. Bring them here, along with the remaining detained men, and allow them an opportunity to answer their secret accusers. The notion that they might pose a threat after all they have been though is ridiculous.”

 

Notably, the adult Canadian women who have returned to Canada have been subjected to peace bonds and, in one case, criminal charges. “Despite all the fear-mongering before their return, the sky has not fallen in, those mothers and children are receiving counseling and health care and education, and the only ones upset about this are the so-called security agencies whose dire but ultimately false allegations have once again proven to be baseless,” Behrens continued.

 

“Canada has made an international commitment to end arbitrary detention, yet how can it trumpet that principle on the international stage when immigration decisions like this are perpetuating that very injustice?” Hirji asks. “In addition, Canadian officials know that one of the children, age 7, faces going blind unless he can get emergency eye surgery. Another child was recently bitten by one of the wild dogs that terrorize the prison camp, and another kid recently broke his hand and had to wait five days in excruciating pain before he was able to get any medical attention. How can Canada look the other way in the face of that reality?”

 

In a statement released through communication with Hirji, one of the mothers said: “I feel very sad and broken hearted. We had so much hope that the Canadian government would approve our file after sitting on it for 15 months but unfortunately, they are harsh and heartless to me and my children. We have lived for years in a detention camp under pieces of cloth, suffering from cold, hunger, poverty, poor medical care. Our kids’ small bodies cannot take any more smoke coming from the oil fields that affects their lungs, their hearts, their bodies, their bones. I haven’t lost hope, because I trust in the kindness and justice of the Canadian people themselves.”

 

A reconsideration appeal in the cases of four detained Canadian men was submitted to the Supreme Court of Canada on March 15. The Court has yet to decide whether it will reconsider its November 2023 refusal to hear that case.

 

 

 

 

  



Friday, April 5, 2024

Ghosts of None is Too Many Haunt Gaza Temporary Residence Policy


By Matthew Behrens

Next month marks the 85th anniversary of one of the most shameful episodes in Canadian history. In 1939, Mackenzie King's government refused to allow the oceanliner St. Louis dock in Halifax after it had been turned away from Cuba and the US. Its 937 Jewish passengers were forced back to Europe, leading to the deaths of 254 in what many saw as a plausible case of impending genocide.

As documented in the landmark Irving Abella/Harold Troper book None is Too Many (named for a bureaucrat’s infamous answer to the question of how many Jews should be admitted to Canada), the Prime Minister wrote “we must seek to keep this part of the Continent free from unrest and from too great an intermixture of foreign strains of blood.” 

The language employed by immigration officials of the day defamed Jewish refugees as an unassimilable people who “never cease their agitation,” “cannot comply with the law”, and “are so unpopular almost everywhere.” Such phrases bear striking resemblance to the ramped up xenophobic rhetoric of those who oppose welcoming Palestinian Canadians’ family members trying to flee starvation and a plausible case of genocide in Gaza.

Justin Trudeau’s 2018 apology for this World War 2 scandal sought to “ensure that its lessons are never forgotten,” but it was almost impossible not to draw  “None is Too Many” comparisons when Immigration Minister Marc Miller conceded before a March 20 House of Commons committee that not a single person had been successfully extricated under the Gaza special measures program he announced three months earlier.

While Miller has publicly shared his frustration and anger over what he admits is a failed program – a tiresome Trudeau-era performative replacement for easily enacted policy fixes – he constantly blames everyone except himself. Indeed, it strains credibility that after Canada was able to facilitate the exit from Gaza of 839 citizens and permanent residents in November and December, Miller has been unable to get a single Canadian’s sister, uncle, niece, spouse or parent across the same Rafah border crossing since the start of 2024.

 If, as Miller claims, Israeli and Egyptian officials are the roadblock, how does he account for the daily crossing of hundreds of Palestinians with family in the US, Italy, Australia and Turkey? Miller also cannot blame anyone but his own department for the failure to arrange travel documents and immediate transit for the hundreds of traumatized, Canada-connected Palestinians stranded for months in Egypt.

 Miller insists his program is intended to save lives yet, despite the ample headline evidence screaming for urgency, he seems unable or unwilling to speed up his snail’s pace bureaucracy and lift the prohibitive cap on program applications.

At the March hearing, Miller’s officials testified that over 2,300 loved ones of Gazan Canadians were waiting to receive the infamous codes that, upon issue by a parsimonious immigration bureaucracy, allow for the submission of life-saving temporary residence applications. Asked why so many remained in limbo, Miller replied that up to 250 codes per week would now be issued. But at that rate, many facing daily bombardment and starvation would have to wait up to 10 weeks (on top of the 10 weeks they’ve already been waiting) when they should be able to apply immediately.

Scores of people have been killed waiting for those codes, and Miller’s slow as you go approach is playing a game of Russian Roulette with the lives of Canadians’ Gaza family members.  

The number of Palestinian applications currently being processed, according to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, is 986, 50 more than the numbers who were exiled on the St. Louis in 1939. While Ukrainians who had far more options to flee the Russian invasion saw their million-plus temporary residence applications processed within 14 days, Palestinians still waiting to be safely reunited with Canadian family cannot help but wonder if they’ve inherited this generation’s unfortunate “None is Too Many” mantle.