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Canada Granting Refugee Status to Fewer Illegal Border Crossers


FILE - A refugee family claiming to be from Haiti take their luggage from their taxi as they arrive at the U.S.-Canada border on Roxham Road in Champlain, New York, August 3, 2017.
FILE - A refugee family claiming to be from Haiti take their luggage from their taxi as they arrive at the U.S.-Canada border on Roxham Road in Champlain, New York, August 3, 2017.

Canada is rejecting more refugee claims from people who crossed the border illegally as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government seeks to dissuade, block and turn back thousands more, according to new data obtained by Reuters.

Forty percent of such border crossers whose claims were finalized in the first three months of this year were granted refugee status, down from 53 percent for all of 2017, according to data provided by Canada's Immigration and Refugee Board.

There were no claims finalized in the first three months of 2017.

The wave of illegal border crossings started up in January 2017 and ramped up over the summer as many Haitian immigrants in the United States who were at risk of losing their temporary legal status streamed into Canada on expectations that they could find a safe haven. In the months since, thousands of Nigerians have made the same crossing.

More than 27,000 asylum seekers have walked across the Canada-U.S. border since President Donald Trump took office, some of whom have told Reuters they left the United States because of Trump's policies and rhetoric toward immigrants.

The influx has strained Canada's backlogged system for assisting people seeking refugee status, leaving aid agencies scrambling to meet growing demand for housing and social services.

A U.S.-Canadian border pact that turns back asylum seekers at border crossings allows immigrants who cross illegally into Canada outside of an official border crossing to apply for refugee status.

FILE - Refugees are processed by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) after crossing illegally into Canada at the U.S.-Canada border on Roxham Road from Champlain, New York, August 3, 2017.
FILE - Refugees are processed by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) after crossing illegally into Canada at the U.S.-Canada border on Roxham Road from Champlain, New York, August 3, 2017.

Trudeau's government has sought to stem the influx by sending officials to the United States to dissuade Haitians, Salvadorans and others from illegally entering into Canada to seek refugee status. It has asked the United States to amend an agreement between the two nations to make it easier to turn back thousands of illegal border crossers.

Like Haitians, thousands of immigrants from El Salvador in the United States have been told that they will lose their temporary legal status.

Canada has also sent its immigration and refugee minister to Nigeria, asking the Nigerian government to help discourage its citizens from crossing illegally into Canada to claim refugee status and asking the United States to not grant visas to people who might then go to Canada.

Immigration and Refugee Board data shows that while only a small number of border-crosser claims have been processed, acceptance rates are down for all groups seeking refugee status.

The success rate is especially low for two of the biggest groups of asylum seekers to enter the country illegally: Haitians and Nigerians, with overall acceptance rates of 9 percent and 33.5 percent, respectively.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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