Quebec, New Brunswick become latest provinces to stop imprisoning migrants - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:01 AM | Calgary | -11.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Quebec, New Brunswick become latest provinces to stop imprisoning migrants

The governments of Quebec and New Brunswick have told the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) they will stop incarcerating migrants detained for administrative reasons, Radio-Canada/CBC has confirmed.

7 provinces have now cancelled contracts with Canada Border Services Agency

barbed wire fence at jail
This is the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre in Ottawa. While seven provinces have now cancelled contracts to house detained migrants, Ontario continues to do so and holds the most migrants of any province. (Radio-Canada)

The governments of Quebec and New Brunswick have told the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) they will stop incarcerating migrants detained for administrative reasons, Radio-Canada/CBC has confirmed.

Seven provinces have now cancelled their contracts with CBSAunder which they were paid to imprison foreign nationals detained under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

"It is excellent news," saidMontreal immigration lawyer Chantal Ianniciello, who represents many detained migrants. "It is not a place suited to their needs".

Ianniciello said when migrants are cut off from the world and put in jail alongside criminals it creates "a lot of psychological stress."

CBSA can detain migrants if it considers their identity is not clearly established, they are a danger to the public or they represent a flight risk. According to its own statistics, most aredetained for the latter reason, meaning the border agency believes they will not appear for immigration processes such as a removal.

CBSA can hold detainees in one of its three immigration holding centres or in provincial jails.

A woman poses for a photo in an office.
Immigration lawyer Chantal Ianniciello is happy Quebec is ending its agreement with CBSA and will stop accepting migrants in its provincial prisons. (Olivier Plante/Radio-Canada)

The detention of migrants in correctional facilities has been strongly denounced bymany human rights organizations and immigration lawyers who say the practice is contrary to international law.

Between 2015 and 2020, roughly a quarter of the 8,000 migrants detained on average each year by CBSA were sent to provincial jails.

By the fiscal year of 2021-2022, the number of immigration detainees had fallen to about 3,000, but close to a quarter of them were still kept in provincial jails.

Detainees sent to other provinces

By ending their agreement with the federal government, Quebec and New Brunswick now fall in line with five otherprovinces: B.C., Nova Scotia, Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan.

To rescind their contract, provinces must generally give a one-year advance notice to CBSA.

The agreement with Alberta will be terminated on June 30, followed by B.C. at the end of July and Nova Scotia at the beginning of August.

With only a few weeks to go before these deadlines, CBSA says it still has not decided what will happen to the immigration detainees currently held in those provincial jails.

"In this context, CBSA is looking for safe and secure solutions to house high-risk detainees,"the border agency said to Radio-Canada in a French written statement.

"At the same time, [CBSA]has systematically reduced the use of provincial correctionalfacilities."

The agency said, as of June 1, there werea total of 104 immigration detainees held in a provincial correctional facility.

There needs to be a national plan to change the detention strategy, according to Julie Chamagne, executive director of the Halifax Refugee Clinic.

Chamagne said she is "very concerned" about CBSA's lack of plan regarding what will happen to the detainees once agreements with the provinces come to an end.

She also said the agency should adopt alternatives to detention, which would allow people to be released into the community.

Since Nova Scotia decided to cancel its agreement with CBSA, immigration detainees have been sent to provincial jails in other provinces, such as New Brunswick, she said.

"It takes people further away from their loved ones, their community and their legal counsel," said Chamagne.

A woman in a black jacket faces right as she speaks to the camera.
Julie Chamagne, who heads the Halifax Refugee Clinic, is concerned what will happen once agreements come to an end in provinces where there are no immigration holding centres. (Robert Short/CBC)

CBSA saidabout three of every four immigration detainees still in provincial jails areinadmissible because they have been convicted of an offence, inside or outside Canada. Examples include offences of a sexual nature, an act of violence or arms or drug trafficking, which are punishable by anywhere from six months to 10 years.

"CBSA uses the term 'serious crime'as a catch-all and uses it to create fear,"said Ianniciello.

She said there are many cases where these prior convictions happened when the migrant was young, or crimes do not pose a threat to society.

Ontario says it's reviewing contract

CBSA has also opened a brand new Immigration Holding Centre in Laval, Que., that could be used to detain migrants CBSA considers to be the most serious cases, she added.

Quebec's public security ministrytold Radio-Canada that it informedCBSAthe province would end its agreement last December. The deadline to stop imprisoning immigration detainees in its provincial jails will beDec.31, 2023.

New Brunswick will stop incarcerating migrants in its jails starting Feb.28, 2024.

Ontario, the province with the most CBSA immigration detainees, said it is now "reviewing" its agreement with the border agency, but a decision has not been made.

Add some good to your morning and evening.

The bright spot in your inbox. Stay connected to the city you love with The Highlight, delivered monthly.

...

The next issue of The Highlight will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.