Canada-US asylum seeker agreement upheld by court

Appeals court sides with the Canadian government, which is defending the agreement to turn back asylum seekers.

Asylum seekers follow a Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officer after being processed for crossing the border from New York into Canada [File: Christinne Muschi/Reuters]

A Canadian appeals court on Thursday upheld a Canada-US agreement to turn back asylum seekers, overturning a lower court ruling, siding with the federal government and setting up a possible Supreme Court showdown.

The Canadian government had launched an appeal defending the agreement and, by association, US immigration detention practices. Canada had argued the pact was necessary to manage its border with the United States.

At issue was whether the Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA), a pact signed in 2002 and under which asylum seekers trying to cross between Canada and the US at formal border crossings are turned around and sent back, violated an asylum seeker’s fundamental rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The ruling on Thursday said it was not the agreement itself that may have been causing the alleged infringements on the claimants’ rights, but the periodic reviews of the designation of the US as a “safe” country as well as “related administrative conduct.”

Canada asylum seekers
A group of asylum seekers wait to be processed after being escorted from their tent encampment to the Canada Border Services in Lacolle, Quebec, Canada in 2017 [File: Christinne Muschi/Reuters]

The challenge should have focused on those reviews, the ruling said, even though the government has kept them secret.

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The ruling also said that the experiences of just 10 asylum seekers cited were not enough to draw conclusions about the US immigration detention system and potential rights violations.

That is a problematic bar to set, said University of Ottawa immigration law professor Jamie Chai Yun Liew, adding that the ruling and the continuation of the agreement fly in the face of the reputation Canada has been building for itself as a champion of refugees.

“It erodes our commitment to refugee protection and also erodes our reputation in upholding the rights of refugees,” she said.

Canada’s government had argued it would suffer “irreparable harm” if the agreement were dissolved and asylum seekers allowed to enter through land-border crossings and make refugee claims.

“[The] STCA remains a comprehensive means for the compassionate, fair, and orderly handling of asylum claims,” the government said in a statement on Thursday.

Lawyers for refugees may apply to be heard by Canada’s Supreme Court.

A family that stated they are from Haiti walk to the US-Canada border to cross into Canada from Champlain, New York
A family from Haiti walk to the border to cross into Canada from Champlain, US [File: Christinne Muschi/ Reuters]

Last year, a federal court ruled the agreement violated asylum seekers’ right to life, liberty and security of the person because those who were turned back could be locked up indefinitely in immigration detention.

The refugees’ lawyers also argued that people trying to make refugee claims that might be accepted in Canada, such as those on the grounds of gender-based discrimination, risked being sent back by the US to their countries of origin.

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During the administration of former US President Donald Trump, tens of thousands of asylum seekers crossed into Canada between ports of entry to skirt the STCA, which only applies to formal border crossings.

Since the advent of COVID-19, however, Canada has a policy of turning back asylum seekers trying to cross irregularly. While it does not track what happens to them, at least a dozen ended up in US immigration detention and at least one was deported.

Source: Reuters

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