Thursday, January 22, 2026
ADVT 
National

As Liberals Decide How To Bring 25,000 Syrians To Canada, The Choice Is Also Who

The Canadian Press, 12 Nov, 2015 12:19 PM
    OTTAWA — Somewhere right now, in a refugee camp in Amman or a rental apartment in Beirut or on a street in Istanbul, sits a Syrian hoping to be among the 25,000 people resettled to Canada, possibly by the end of the year.
     
    United Nations staff working with the Canadian government to figure out who will be on the planes or ships dispatched to the region in the coming weeks say they are trying to keep expectations realistic.
     
    "Rumours are already going in the refugee populations that there's a large program, that Canadians are coming," said Furio De Angelis, the Canadian representative of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
     
    "We have to explain, present it as it is, an extraordinary effort but not everyone is eligible."
     
    The UN refugee agency, tasked with overseeing what's been called the greatest refugee crisis since the Second World War — is actually very specific when it comes to selecting people for resettlement.
     
    Their cases are assessed against a number of categories, including whether they're in immediate physical danger, are survivors of violence or torture, have medical needs or are a woman, child or adolescent at risk.
     
    Those categories are applied against a person's current situation, not the one they left. So, for example, a female refugee from Syrian being detained in Lebanon and who is therefore at risk of being deported, could be a case that lands on a Canadian visa officer's desk.
     
    But unlike usual procedures, where the cases are processed individually, this program will likely involving the batching together of groups and the simplification of paperwork. For example, the Canadian government could accept that no one under 18 is likely a major security risk and lessen the requirement to conduct detailed reviews of those files.
     
     
    The focus is on choosing refugees from Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey. 
     
    In Jordan, there are 629,152 registered Syrians, the majority of whom do not live in refugee camps. The population is roughly split 50-50 between male and female and more than half are under the age of 18. About 30 per cent of the population is identified as having a specific need that would make them eligible for resettlement.
     
    In Lebanon, there are around 1.1 million registered Syrians and though the government has no official camps for them, some have crowded into camps originally set up for Palestinians. There are at least 1,500 children, nearly three-quarters of them Syrian, begging or working as street vendors, according to the UN.
     
    In Turkey, there are 2.1 million registered Syrians, again split roughly 50-50 between male and female and about a third are children. Two-thirds of the youngsters aren't in school, according to one recent study by Human Rights Watch. Alan Kurdi, the child whose family had considered trying to reach Canada as they fled from Syria, died instead trying to reach Turkey.
     
    Altogether, there are 4.2 million people registered as refugees from the Syrian conflict, and the United Nations wants to resettle about a third.
     
    While the Liberal plan is focused on the logistics of how to get some of them here now, they are also thinking about the future.
     
    Immigration Minister John McCallum highlighted this week that one member of the committee pulling together the plan is Minister of Democratic Institutions Maryam Monsef.
     
    "She is a minister who is actually a refugee herself," McCallum said. "We talked about the fact that 20 years from now we may have one of the Syrian refugees sitting around the cabinet table.
     
     
    "That speaks to the kind of vision we have in this plan."
     
    The Liberal cabinet meets to review their approach on Thursday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Preliminary Trial Date Set For Ontario Woman Charged After Giving Water To Pigs

    Preliminary Trial Date Set For Ontario Woman Charged After Giving Water To Pigs
    The preliminary hearing for a woman charged with mischief after providing water to pigs en route to a slaughterhouse has been set for the end of November.

    Preliminary Trial Date Set For Ontario Woman Charged After Giving Water To Pigs

    Two Turbaned Sikhs Among Four Indo-Canadians Sworn In As Cabinet Ministers In Canada

    Two Turbaned Sikhs Among Four Indo-Canadians Sworn In As Cabinet Ministers In Canada
    The Punjabi community in Canada made history on Wednesday when two turbaned Sikhs, among four Indo-Canadians, were sworn in as cabinet ministers, as 42-year-old Justin Trudeau took oath as the country's 23rd prime minister at a grand public ceremony here.

    Two Turbaned Sikhs Among Four Indo-Canadians Sworn In As Cabinet Ministers In Canada

    Richmond Councillor Says Vancouver Coastal Health Ignoring Earthquake Danger

    Richmond Councillor Says Vancouver Coastal Health Ignoring Earthquake Danger
    Bill McNulty says studies conducted in 2005 and 2011 found Richmond Hospital could not withstand even a moderate shaker.

    Richmond Councillor Says Vancouver Coastal Health Ignoring Earthquake Danger

    Two Walk Away From Vancouver Island Plane Crash; Vernon Man Dies In Unrelated Collision

    Two Walk Away From Vancouver Island Plane Crash; Vernon Man Dies In Unrelated Collision
    A 36-year-old Vernon man has been identified as the victim of a single vehicle crash on Highway 95 south of Golden in southeastern B.C.

    Two Walk Away From Vancouver Island Plane Crash; Vernon Man Dies In Unrelated Collision

    Cabinet Berth Likely For Sikh MP Navdeep Bains In Canada

    Cabinet Berth Likely For Sikh MP Navdeep Bains In Canada
    If you are still waiting for Justin Trudeau to call and offer you a cabinet post, you can stop the wait Trudeau has already selected his new cabinet and made his telephone calls to the lucky incoming ministers

    Cabinet Berth Likely For Sikh MP Navdeep Bains In Canada

    Drones Tested To Help Fight Blazes In Difficult B.C. Wildfire Season

    Drones Tested To Help Fight Blazes In Difficult B.C. Wildfire Season
    The B.C. Wildfire Service contracted two commercial drone companies in July and August to soar above the Boulder Creek and Elaho fires near Pemberton and the Rock Creek fire just north of the Canada-U.S. border.

    Drones Tested To Help Fight Blazes In Difficult B.C. Wildfire Season