Migrant march for permanent residency fills downtown streets Sunday - Action News
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Toronto

Migrant march for permanent residency fills downtown streets Sunday

Migrants, including undocumented people, students and refugees, marched in cities across Canada Sunday to demand permanent residency status for all ahead of the resumption of federal parliament on Monday.

'Without status you can't do anything in this country,' said one undocumented migrant

People hold signs and march through an intersection.
The protesters are calling on the government to create an uncapped program that would grant permanent resident status to all migrants and undocumented people without any exclusions. (Daniel Dadoun/CBC)

Migrants, including undocumented people, students and refugees, marched in cities across Canada Sunday to demand permanent residency status for all ahead of the resumption of federal parliament on Monday.

In Toronto, migrants and supporters marched downtown, including through the intersection of Yonge Street and Dundas Street, prompting police to say on social media that traffic in the area had been disrupted.

The protesters are calling on the government to create an uncapped program that would grant permanent resident status to all migrants and undocumented people without any exclusions, according to Sarom Rho, an organizer with Migrant Workers Alliance for Change.

"Without permanent resident status migration, undocumented people are facing massive exploitation at work, are denied life saving treatments in healthcare, live in daily fear of deportation and the pain of family separation," Rho said.

Protest comes after UN criticizes foreign worker program

The protest comes after Canada's temporary foreign worker program was labelled a "breeding ground for contemporary forms of slavery" by a United Nations official earlier this month.Tomoya Obokata, UN special rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery,called on the federal government to give all temporary foreign workers a pathway to longer term or permanent residency.

At the time, a spokesperson for Immigration Minister Marc Miller's office wouldn't say if such a permanent pathway would be instituted.

Listen| Unpacking the UN report on Canada's foreign worker program:

"We cannot speculate on future policies. All new policies will be announced publicly," a spokesperson said in an email to CBC News. The ministry did not reply to a request for comment on this story prior to publication.

1.7 million people on temporary permits

Rho said Sunday that there are 1.7 million people in Canada on temporary study or work permits. She says they are growing Canada's food, taking care of children and working in essential frontline jobs.

"That's one in 23 people and it hurts all of us when there is a section of our society who are denied the same rights and protections [as everyone else]," Rho said.

A person stands with a mic at a rally.
Sarom Rho, an organizer with Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, said that there are 1.7 million people in Canada on temporary study or work permits (Daniel Dadoun/CBC)

Jane, an undocumented immigrant from Uganda, attended the protest in Toronto. She requested CBC Newswithhold her last name because of her precarious immigration status.

After living undocumented in Canada for six years, Jane says she wants permanent residency so she can get a good job and be treated equally.

"Afair job where you won't be discriminated, where you earndecent wages, where you [are] free to go wherever you want, to reunite with your families," she said."Without status you can't do anything in this country."

With files from Darren Major and Reuters