Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

At Least 13 Countries Seek To Emulate Canada Refugee-sponsor System: John McCallum

The Canadian Press, 20 Sep, 2016 11:42 AM
    UNITED NATIONS, United States — At least 13 countries have made inquiries about Canada's private refugee-sponsoring system in the hope of potentially emulating it, the federal immigration minister said Monday during a conference on the historic migration crisis.
     
    John McCallum said the United Kingdom is one of several countries looking at establishing a similar program where private citizens provide funding to bring in refugees and help them get set up in their new home.
     
    McCallum will announce an initiative on private refugee sponsorships Tuesday with the United Nations and billionaire George Soros.
     
    Canada's program was developed under the Pierre Trudeau and Joe Clark governments of the 1970s in response to a migration wave from Vietnam. It has gained new attention amid the wide-ranging effects of Syria’s five-year civil war, with other countries now developing similar systems.
     
    "At least 13 countries have expressed an interest in this. That could be one part of the solution for the world at large," McCallum told reporters at the United Nations conference, where Canada announced a 10-per-cent funding increase for international aid.
     
    "So we have had good conversations with a number of countries who may want to follow that practice... I think this is a very useful model that we could export to the rest of the world."
     
     
    He said the details might vary from one country to the next. Australia began testing a similar model in 2013, and Germany has also followed suit. McCallum said that if countries can enlist their citizens to sponsor refugees and help them get started in a new home, "you're miles ahead."
     
    Under the government plan to resettle 25,000 Syrians by early this year, nearly 9,000 were privately sponsored and another 2,000 were sponsored by a program that blends private and government support.
     
    The program set a cap of private sponsorships allowed per year. It allows people to sponsor a refugee for $12,600, which includes help with income and initial costs like groceries and rent.
     
    McCallum said Canadians would be proud of what he's hearing at this week's United Nations conference: "This is a place where Canada can stand tall. The international community has recognized and strongly supported what we have done."
     
    He noted, however, the numerous challenges ahead. He said refugees to Canada have all been housed — now he says the big hurdles to clear are English- or French-language training, and integration into the job market.
     
    He said the troubles refugees experience should come as no surprise.
     
     
    "We asked for vulnerable people — we got vulnerable people," he said.
     
    "The other side of that is it takes longer to settle them in."
     
    He suggested Canada might increase its refugee intake next year, after the government sets its annual targets: "Of course I would like to see more. It is a long tradition of Canada to welcome refugees... How many we will welcome — we have to determine that and we'll announce it in November."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Live longer with less sex and plant-rich diet

    Live longer with less sex and plant-rich diet
    As most of us struggle to juggle work commitments with the demands of family and daily life, new research suggests that slow pace of life is the secret...

    Live longer with less sex and plant-rich diet

    Financial rewards help smokers kick the butt

    Financial rewards help smokers kick the butt
    Offering small financial incentives doubles smoking cessation rates among socio-economically disadvantaged smokers, especially women, says a new research....

    Financial rewards help smokers kick the butt

    Do smartphone apps help you lose weight?

    Do smartphone apps help you lose weight?
    Smartphone apps that promise to help you lose the extra kilos may not actually be doing so as most users leave them midway, new research says....

    Do smartphone apps help you lose weight?

    New York's first cat cafe opens next month

    New York's first cat cafe opens next month
    New York City cat lovers will be able to tuck in with tabbies next month, when a cafe opens offering feline companionship, a trend imported from Asia which has...

    New York's first cat cafe opens next month

    'Friendly' plants become more diverse

    'Friendly' plants become more diverse
    A study co-authored by Indian-origin scientist Anurag Agrawal has found that when plants develop mutually beneficial relationships with animals...

    'Friendly' plants become more diverse

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb
     After the discovery of a human skeleton at the Amphipolis burial complex in northern Greece this week, the focus of experts has turned to the DNA testing...

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb