Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

A Look At The Refugee Process For People Walking Across The U.S. Border

Darpan News Desk, 09 Feb, 2017 12:57 PM
    WINNIPEG — People have been walking across the United States border to claim refugee status for years, but a Winnipeg immigration lawyer says he's not used to seeing them cross over in the bitter cold.
     
    When they arrive, says Bashir Khan, they are often thirsty and hungry.
     
    For some, the first Canadian they meet is a farmer who welcomes them inside and offers a meal.
     
    "They'll cook up 12 eggs and let a poor, hungry refugee claimant wolf if all down," says Khan.
     
    It's the migrant who asks to speak with border officials or police, he adds. "The refugee claimant is the one begging them to call, not the other way around."
     
    Khan has 17 clients who have braved the weather in recent months to cross into Manitoba as an "irregular arrival." RCMP have said that  last weekend 22 people walked from North Dakota into Emerson-Franklin. The majority were put up in a community hall and fed by volunteers.
     
    Officials in Emerson say they've recently seen more border jumpers following planned new restrictions in the United States on refugees.
     
    The Canada-U.S. Safe Third Country Agreement requires people to apply for asylum in the first country they arrive. If they have already applied as a refugee in the U.S. before showing up at a border port in Canada, and have no blood relatives here, they are turned away.
     
    But if a person crosses into Canada somewhere else and then applies as a refugee, the case is heard in the Canadian system.
     
     
    The Canada Border Services Agency says 11,000 refugee claimants were processed at designated ports last year. Figures released earlier this week show more than 2,000 claimants entered "irregularly," with growing numbers in Manitoba, Quebec, British Columbia and Yukon.
     
    Khan says he has only ever had clients walk across the border into Manitoba in warmer months.
     
    "They always come when winter breaks in the spring until late fall ... In the last seven years, I've never seen anyone come in the dead of winter and risk life and limb."
     
    Two men from Ghana were severely frostbitten in December when they crossed the border at Emerson. It speaks to their desperation to get to Canada, says Khan.
     
    Refugee claimants are released after meeting with a border officer for a couple of hours, Khan says. They have 15 days to file a claim and a hearing date is set in three to four months.
     
    During that time, they may connect with friends or family or an immigration agency to find a place to live. But many don't have money. Some end up in homeless shelters and rely on legal aid, says Winnipeg immigration lawyer Alastair Clarke.
     
    "I've had clients who just show up to my office every week or so because they don't have email. They don't have telephone. They struggle with the language, transportation," he says.
     
    "They have some help — but they have limited help — so they do what they can."
     
    They can apply for work permits but that takes three to four months and, by then, their cases have usually been decided, Clarke says.
     
    Erick Ambtman with the Edmonton Mennonite Centre for Newcomers says some claimants do make their way to communities further north, such as Edmonton, to stay with family. "In which case we would be potentially supporting their claim like helping them with documentation and things like that."
     
     
    Agencies like his also have emergency funds to help with food, clothing and counselling and some short-term housing, he says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    DU Professor, Allegedly Assaulted And Dragged Along Road, Shares Incident On Facebook

    DU Professor, Allegedly Assaulted And Dragged Along Road, Shares Incident On Facebook
    A Delhi University professor was allegedly assaulted by a bag snatcher who also dragged her along the road when she tried to resist the attempt, as bystanders silently watched the incident unfold in broad daylight.

    DU Professor, Allegedly Assaulted And Dragged Along Road, Shares Incident On Facebook

    Memorial To Be Held Today For Canadian Killed Fighting ISIS In Syria

    Memorial To Be Held Today For Canadian Killed Fighting ISIS In Syria
    Nazzareno Tassone, 24, was killed on Dec. 21 while fighting alongside the Kurdish People's Defense Units.

    Memorial To Be Held Today For Canadian Killed Fighting ISIS In Syria

    Manitoba Teen Who Wanted To Take Up Arms With ISIS Will Not Be Kept In Custody

    Manitoba Teen Who Wanted To Take Up Arms With ISIS Will Not Be Kept In Custody
    The teen, who can't be identified under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, was 16 when he was charged with posting pro-terrorism comments on social media.

    Manitoba Teen Who Wanted To Take Up Arms With ISIS Will Not Be Kept In Custody

    'Extremely Close' Winnipeg Family Distraught After Parents Killed During Cuban Vacation

    'Extremely Close' Winnipeg Family Distraught After Parents Killed During Cuban Vacation
    WINNIPEG — The three children of a Winnipeg couple who were killed in an ambulance collision while vacationing in Cuba are fundraising to help bring the bodies of their parents home and cover their funeral expenses.

    'Extremely Close' Winnipeg Family Distraught After Parents Killed During Cuban Vacation

    Former Newfoundland Star Athlete Pleads Not Guilty To First-degree Murder

    Former Newfoundland Star Athlete Pleads Not Guilty To First-degree Murder
      Five weeks have been set aside for the trial of Anne Norris, a 29-year-old former leading athlete, to start on Jan. 15 of next year.

    Former Newfoundland Star Athlete Pleads Not Guilty To First-degree Murder

    Ontario Agrees To Fund Toronto Supervised Injection Sites Amid Opioid Crisis

    Ontario Agrees To Fund Toronto Supervised Injection Sites Amid Opioid Crisis
    TORONTO — Ontario is committing to fund three supervised injection sites in Toronto at an estimated annual cost of $1.6 million and about $400,000 to create the spaces.

    Ontario Agrees To Fund Toronto Supervised Injection Sites Amid Opioid Crisis