Canada wants US help in turning back asylum seekers
CGTN
["north america","other"]
As thousands of asylum seekers cross into Canada from the United States, Canada is reported to be meeting American resistance to its desire to change a bilateral agreement to allow it to turn them back.
Under the Safe Third Country Agreement, or STCA, asylum seekers who arrive at a formal Canada-U.S. border crossing going in either direction are turned back and told to apply for asylum in the first country they arrived in.
Canada wants the agreement rewritten to apply to the entire border but the United States is not cooperating, a Canadian official with knowledge of the discussions was quoted as saying by Reuters.
More than 26,000 people have illegally crossed the Canada-US border to file refugee claims in the past 15 months, walking over ditches and on empty roads along the world’s longest undefended border. Many have told Reuters they might have stayed in the United States were it not for President Donald Trump’s immigration rhetoric and policies.
Recently, the asylum seekers have been mostly Nigerian arriving with recently issued US visitor visas, according to Canadian officials.
Previously, the majority were Haitians who had lived in the United States for years before suddenly learning they would lose their protected status. 
Canadian officials first discussed changing the pact with US Department of Homeland Security officials last September, shortly after more than 5,700 asylum seekers walked into Canada in August.
“We’d like to be able to get them to agree that we can, if somebody comes across, we just send them back,” the official told Reuters, adding that Canada had raised the issue “at least a dozen” times since.
“I wouldn’t say they’ve been objecting or saying: ‘No, we won’t do it,’ but it’s been not responding rapidly.”
The Department of Homeland Security is reviewing Canada’s proposal and has not yet made a decision, a spokeswoman said.
The Canadian official compared Canada’s position to American requests that Mexico prevent migrants traversing its territory from entering the United States.
'Potentially deadly risks'
“We’ve got a problem, here. We’ve got to fix it,” the official added. “And we need the Americans’ cooperation.”
For now, another official said, Canada would keep doing what it is doing: Managing the influx of refugee claimants in a strained system, while seeking to dissuade would-be crossers through outreach efforts.
Even if the United States agreed to take back anyone trying to cross into Canada, keeping people out between all ports of entry would be a challenge and could result in asylum seekers taking potentially deadly risks to avoid detection, said University of Toronto law and human rights professor Audrey Macklin.
The STCA already faces a Canadian court challenge that argues the agreement is discriminatory and violates Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Canada has also urged US officials to crack down on visas, saying many of the asylum seekers had valid US visas and used the United States merely as a transit point.
Earlier this year, Canadian officials traveled to Nigeria to speak with Nigerian government officials and US embassy staff.
The number of US visas being issued to Nigerians has since dropped, said Mathieu Genest, a spokesman for Canadian Immigration and Refugee Minister Ahmed Hussen.
Source(s): Reuters