Quebec to continue detaining migrants for CBSA into 2024 - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:40 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Quebec to continue detaining migrants for CBSA into 2024

Quebec will continue the controversial practice of detaining migrantssix months later than originally planned at the request of the federal government, according to information obtained by Radio-Canada.

Province previously said it would end controversial practice as of Dec. 31

A jail seen through a fence in summer.
The jail in Rivire-des-prairies, Que., is among those that has detained migrants for the Canada Border Services Agency. (Olivier Plante/Radio-Canada)

Quebec will continue the controversial practice of detaining migrantssix months later than originally planned at the request of the federal government, according to information obtained by Radio-Canada.

Under its current agreement with the federal government, Quebec agrees to incarcerate in its provincial jails people detained for administrative reasons related to their immigration file.

Last year, Quebec informed the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) that it would end this controversial practice as of Dec. 31, 2023.

Imprisoning immigration detainees in correctional facilities is contrary to international law, according to many human rights groups and experts.

Quebec has since granted "a grace period" to CBSA, at the agency's request, according to Quebec's public security ministry. The new deadline has been set for June 30, 2024.

Immigration lawyer Pierre-Olivier Marcoux says he is "disappointed" with thecontinued detention of migrants in Quebec and "concerned" for the well-being of his clients at the Legal Aid Office in Montreal.

A lawyer poses for an indoor photo.
Immigration lawyer Pierre-Olivier Marcoux is worried for his clients as Quebec jails will continue to detain migrants for the federal government through the end of June 2024. (Submitted by Pierre-Olivier Marcoux)

"Provinces like Quebec, which decided to end this agreement, did so for a reason. And this reason was concerns about the lack of respect for fundamental human rights in provincial jails,"Marcoux said.

In jail, it is more difficult for a migrant to accessmental health care or communicate with a lawyer and their loved ones, he added.

In August 2023, Nova Scotia became the first Canadian province to stop incarcerating migrants on behalf of the federal government.

This autumn, Alberta, Saskatchewan and British Columbia followed suit.Other provinces have committed to doing the same in 2024.

CBSA can detain foreign nationals if it believes their identity has not been clearly established, they pose a danger to the public or they pose a flight risk.The vast majority are detained for the latter reason, meaning the border agency believes they will not appear for immigration processes such as a removal.

Migrants can be held in one of three federal immigration holding centres or in provincial jails.

Between 2015 and 2020, the CBSA detained some 8,000 migrants on average each year, of which about one in every four wassent to provincial correctional facilities.

During the pandemic and border closures, the number of immigration detainees dropped.In the fiscal year 2022-2023, CBSA detained 5,248 people, including 931 in provincial jails.

As of Dec. 18, seven people were imprisoned in a provincial facility in Quebec under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, according to the public security ministry.

CBSA told Radio-Canada earlier this year the most serious cases, such as individuals inadmissible for reasons of serious criminality, make up the majority of migrants whoremain in correctional facilities.

The outside of a detention centre in summer.
This photo shows the outside of the jail in Laval, Que., where some migrants have been detained for the Canada Border Services Agency. (Olivier Plante/CBC)

According to Marcoux, migrants suffering from serious mental health problems also find themselves in jailwhere their condition deteriorates even further.

"Often, when people are imprisoned, they tell us about their difficulties and their distress," he said."This is really not good for the mental, and I would even say physical health, of our clients."

Marcouxsaid many arrive from war-torn countries where they have already experienced trauma.

Following the decision byseveral provinces to terminate their contracts with the federal government, CBSA said it is upgrading its immigration holding centres in Laval, Que., Toronto and Surrey, B.C., in order to "accommodate high-risk detainees."

A separate area will be set up in Laval,the border agency wrote in an email to Radio-Canada. CBSA said it is also adapting its staffing and training of guards.

Marcoux said he didn't understand why these changes were only happening now.

To rescind agreements with the federal government, provinces hadto give one year's notice.