As word spreads that the
US
government is detaining and placing into deportation a large number of men
participating in the Special Registration program, thousands of others are
abandoning their homes and lives in the
United States
to seek asylum in
Canada
. The NSEERS Special Registration program requires men over the age of 16 to
register at local Department of Homeland Security offices because they are
citizens of 25 mostly Arabic and Islamic countries. Immigrants who entered the
United States
illegally, or whose visa expired or has been violated, can be deported or
detained when they register.
Many of the men and families
who are going to
Canada
are being sheltered in refugee sanctuaries and run-down motels on the
United States
side of the border. Some are being assisted by
U.S.
government-funded agencies until their hearing with Canadian immigration
officials. The
United States
government reportedly believes that the refugee services benefits outweigh
their harboring of the undocumented immigrants.
The sanctuaries have generally
been charged with helping people get asylum in the
United States
, but are now helping people gain asylum in
Canada
. These men know that going before the DHS means being locked up in jail while
they wait to be deported.
Canada
is generally believed to have more lenient immigration policies than its
neighbor to the south, and it has not enacted post-September 11th
regulations similar to those of the
United States
requiring stricter monitoring of men from the listed countries. Canadian
immigration officials generally do not detain asylum seekers and such
individuals are often allowed to work.
Some immigration restriction
advocates oppose
U.S.
agencies assisting illegal immigrants in circumventing the law. Immigration
restriction advocacy groups like the Center for Immigration Studies believe that
illegal immigrants should not have assistance in hiding from American
immigration authorities. According to the Safe Third Country Agreement, an
accord between the
United States
and
Canada
that goes into effect later this year, an immigrant can only seek asylum in the
country he originally entered. There are many who believe that this accord would
put an end to the situation.
Freedom House in
Detroit
is a nonprofit charity that has helped nearly 300 people seek asylum in
Canada
since January. David Koelsch, an attorney at Freedom House, believes that many
of these refugees would have been eligible for asylum in the Untied States if
they had had money for a lawyer or understood the application deadlines. Some
fleeing families did not believe that they needed to apply, thinking that if
they were working and paying taxes, no one would bother them. But that was
before the September 11 turning point. The Canadian government will issue the
refugees vouchers for an apartment and a lawyer to help with their asylum case.
Canada
had once processed asylum applicants in a day and the
United States
had assured its government that they would not detain immigrants seeking asylum
in
Canada
. But since the recent backlog of asylum-seekers has grown, the
United States
has not stuck to the agreement and is now detaining those they find. A Canadian
official says that their system is working and is in keeping with their two
goals: The safety of
Canada
and to maintain their humanitarian tradition. Pakistanis are one of
Canada
’s largest immigrant groups.
One
refugee fleeing to
Canada
said, “Just because I don’t have status does not make me a criminal.”
Many who believe that they were just being apart of the American dream
hold this position.