From the BBC:
“Canada reimposes visas
requirements for Mexicans as asylum claims surge”
A surge of Mexican nationals
seeking asylum has led Canada to bring back visa requirements that were lifted
nearly eight years ago. Immigration Minister Marc Miller said on Thursday that
more than half of the asylum applications to the country are either abandoned
or rejected. Ottawa removed the requirements in 2016 to improve relations with
Mexico. Since then, an influx of immigrants has put strain on the government of
Quebec and pushed it to a "breaking point". Asylum claims from
Mexican nationals to Canada rose from 260 to 23,995 between 2016 and 2023, an
increase of more than 9,000%, according to federal data. In Ottawa, 17% of all
asylum claims in 2023 came from Mexico, a record high, Mr Miller said at a
press conference. He said that the Mexican government has expressed
dissatisfaction with the reinstated visa requirements but "Mexico is and
will remain an important partner". Mexicans with work or study permits
will be exempt from the visa rules. The federal government has been under
pressure from the province of Quebec over the surge of asylum claims.
In January, the premier of the
province said it was at a "breaking point" due to an influx of asylum
seekers putting a strain on government services like education, as well as
housing. Premier Francois Legault asked Ottawa for C$1bn ($736m; £582m) to help
the province handle the cost of the influx. Nearly 60,000 new asylum seekers
were recorded in Quebec in the first 11 months of 2023, according to Mr
Legault, with another 65,000 expected this year. About a quarter of those are
from Mexico, Quebec has said. The provincial immigration minister, Christine
Fréchette, said that an "important step has been taken but it won't solve
everything". "The number of asylum seekers welcomed by Quebec is far
too high and our services are overwhelmed," she wrote in a statement on X,
formerly Twitter. A year ago, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and US
President Joe Biden agreed a border deal that closed a loophole that had
allowed asylum seekers to enter at unofficial points on the Canada-US border
and make asylum claims. Many asylum claimants are now coming in by air, Mr
Miller said.
Under the new rules that come
into effect on Thursday night, Mexican nationals who hold a valid US
non-immigrant visa or have held a Canadian visa in the past 10 years will be
able to apply for an electronic travel authorization - an entry requirement for
people who are visa exempt. All other Mexican nationals will need to apply for
a visa.
^ Since Mexico is unwilling and
unable to stop the flow of Illegal Immigrants from their country the US and
Canada have to do the job. ^
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