Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

2020 worst year for refugee resettlement: UN

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Dec, 2020 05:50 PM
  • 2020 worst year for refugee resettlement: UN

The year 2020 will go down as the worst for refugee resettlement in recent history, says the UN refugee agency's Canadian representative.

With nearly 168 countries implementing border and travel restrictions, millions of displaced people around the globe were stuck, unable to either return to their home countries or move to others.

Canada, however, was one of only a few that did listen to urgent pleas from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, said Rema Jamous Imseis, the UNHCR's Canadian representative.

Even at the height of the pandemic, when most countries were looking entirely inward, Canada did accept emergency cases and as travel has resumed continues to take in more, she told The Canadian Press in an interview.

"It hasn't, unfortunately, been at the levels that we had planned for prior to the pandemic, but it still is offering that critical lifeline to people who desperately need it," she said.

"And we hope that next year actually is going to bring us a very different context and an ability not only to meet those targets, but to perhaps even exceed them."

Canada had planned to resettle around 30,000 refugees in 2020.

By the end of September, just under 6,000 had arrived, and a spokesman for Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino said the end-of-year figure will be closer to 7,000.

The target for resettlement next year is 35,000, but how realistic that goal is considering the unknowns around the end of the pandemic is unclear.

Mendicino's spokesman said in an email that the entire resettlement "ecosystem" continues to operate at a reduced capacity, but is slowly spooling back up.

"While our operations have been affected, we’ve come a long way since the onset of the pandemic and are now processing nearly six times as many refugee cases as in a similar period last year," Alexander Cohen said in an email.

The border closures weren't the only challenge this year for refugees, said Jamous Imseis.

Many of the world's displaced people were just scraping by economically before the pandemic hit, but their sources of income completely dried up, she said.

"The ability to sustain themselves and their families has been wiped out," she said.

"So you saw entire populations going from vulnerable, but with the ability to sustain themselves overnight to becoming really vulnerable."

There's also been a massive blow to the ability of children to be in school. A pivot to online learning possible in some developed nations just isn't applicable elsewhere, she said.

Some studies suggest more than half of refugee girls may never go back to post-secondary education after the pandemic, she said.

"They haven't been at school this whole time, and they may never go back because life circumstances have changed so dramatically," she said.

Monday is the UNHCR's 70th anniversary. It was created to help displaced Europeans after the Second World War and originally was only supposed to exist for a few years.

"But sadly, we're still here and it signals the failure of the international community to really address long-standing issues, and drivers of displacement globally," said Jamous Imseis.

"We look forward to the day when our services are no longer needed."

Photo courtesy of Istock. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter
Deborah Doonanco, who is 58, was initially found guilty of second-degree murder, arson and interfering with human remains after Kevin Feland's body was found in her home in Glendon, Alta., in May 2014.

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter

Climate change creating vast new glacial lakes

Climate change creating vast new glacial lakes
The fact that glaciers around the world are shrinking due to climate change is well-established. What hasn't been so well studied is where all that water is going.

Climate change creating vast new glacial lakes

PBO: Business rent relief to cost $931M

PBO: Business rent relief to cost $931M
A federal spending watchdog says a program aiming to providing rent relief to small and medium-sized businesses will cost just under $1 billion this fiscal year.

PBO: Business rent relief to cost $931M

COVID pushes Vancouver Aquarium to close again

COVID pushes Vancouver Aquarium to close again
Ocean Wise, the non-profit organization that operates the aquarium, says in a news release the decision was made in response to one of the most financially challenging times in its 64-year history.

COVID pushes Vancouver Aquarium to close again

N.B. Liberals promise to eliminate use of herbicide

N.B. Liberals promise to eliminate use of herbicide
New Brunswick Liberal Leader Kevin Vickers is promising to gradually eliminate the provincial government's use of an industrial herbicide on Crown land over the next four years.

N.B. Liberals promise to eliminate use of herbicide

Canada signs more deals to get vaccines

Canada signs more deals to get vaccines
Deals are now in place for Canada to get access to vaccines being tested by both Johnson & Johnson and Novavax. Earlier this month Ottawa signed similar deals with Pfizer and Moderna.

Canada signs more deals to get vaccines