Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada Faces Mounting Pressure To End Safe Third Country Agreement With U.S.

The Canadian Press, 22 Jun, 2018 04:23 PM
    The Canadian government is facing mounting pressure to suspend its Safe Third Country Agreement with the United States amid concerns over child migrants being detained at the U.S. border but the pact has long been widely panned by refugee law experts and advocates.
     
     
    Efrat Arbel is an associate professor at the University of British Columbia and was lead investigator on a Harvard Law School examination of the agreement in 2013.
     
     
    She believes strongly that Canada should never have signed onto the agreement and should absolutely suspend it now, especially in light of recent policy changes in the United States regarding asylum seekers.
     
     
    "I think that the evidence is clear and has been since the creation of the Safe Third Country Agreement in 2004 that the United States is not a safe country for refugees," she said.
     
     
    "The United States' standards for refugee protection fall short of what the 'safe third' (agreement) requires for designation of a country as safe."
     
     
     
     
    The Safe Third Country agreement is based on the core principle that people seeking refugee protection must file their claim in the first safe country they arrive in, unless they qualify for one of a few exceptions.
     
     
    The other core tenet is that Canada considers the United States a safe country for refugees. So, if an asylum seeker comes to Canada at an official border crossing from the United States and tries to claim refugee protection, they will be refused entry and encouraged to make their claim in the United States - the "safe country" from which they just came.
     
     
    The requirements for designating a country as safe are threefold: each country must comply with the United Nations convention against torture and the UN convention on refugees and it must maintain a good human rights record.
     
     
    The United States has long fallen short on meeting these requirements, Arbel says. A recent ruling by U.S Attorney General Jeff Sessions that domestic and gang violence are no longer grounds for asylum make the argument for suspending the agreement even stronger, she added.
     
     
    "That is a decision that clearly strays from international protection standards and that falls far below what Canada has long recognized in its domestic asylum regime."
     
     
     
     
    Nadia Abu-Zahra, associate professor of International Development and Global Studies at the University of Ottawa, also believes Canada was wrong to sign the Safe Third Country agreement, notably after the U.S. government detained and deported Canadian citizen Mahar Arar to Syria in 2002, where he faced almost a year of torture.
     
     
    How can Canada assume the U.S. is safe for refugees from war-torn countries when even a Canadian citizen was deported and tortured, Abu-Zahra asked?
     
     
    "That's the assumption that's being made in this agreement. And that assumption was incorrect in 2002 and that assumption is now very visibly incorrect with babies being taken away from their mothers and children being held in cages."
     
     
    Canada and its welcoming attitude toward refugees has long been its business card for the world, Abu-Zahra said. Canada therefore should be showing leadership in standing up for the rights of refugees being treated like criminals and facing the possibility of being sent back to their home countries - countries they fled due to war, violence and persecution, she added.
     
     
    As for what would happen if the agreement were suspended, Arbel, Abu-Zahra and others say it could lead to a larger number of asylum seekers coming to Canada.
     
     
    But it could also alleviate the problems Canada has been facing with a spike in asylum seekers coming irregularly across the Canada-U.S. border at non-official ports of entry.
     
     
    "At the moment the agreement just pushes asylum seekers towards irregular modes of entry, it increases insecurity and can put their lives and their safety at risk," Arbel said.
     
     
    "Allowing asylum seekers to cross at (official) ports of entry is beneficial not just for asylum seekers, but also for Canada. We can more effectively manage the flow of asylum seekers, we can resource our borders more effectively, as we have in the past."
     
     
     
     
     
    If Canada refuses entry to an asylum seeker from the U.S. knowing the U.S. will send them back to their countries where they will face persecution, Canada is complicit, said Janet Dench, executive director of the Canadian Council for Refugees.
     
     
    She too pointed to the recent decision by the Trump administration to disallow domestic and gang violence as grounds for asylum.
     
     
    "I think particularly for this current Canadian government that is proudly positioning itself as a feminist government and protector of women's rights, it is completely incompatible for us to be saying we're going to send women back to the U.S. knowing the U.S. has committed not to defend their rights if they're fleeing gender-based persecution."
     
     
    For its part, the Trudeau government has said it will not make rash decisions when it comes to immigration policy or the Safe Third Country Agreement.
     
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said this week that informal conversations have been ongoing to modernizing and improve the agreement. But he stressed that all asylum seekers - regular or irregular - must go through the proper channels to determine if they qualify for refugee status.
     
     
    "If they do not qualify as asylum seekers, they will be returned to their country of origin. That is the system that we have." 
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Charged After Accidentally Shooting Girlfriend In Abdomen: Police

    Man Charged After Accidentally Shooting Girlfriend In Abdomen: Police
    RCMP Sgt. Marc Fortin says police were called to a home in Cloverdale, near Hartland, around 2 p.m. Sunday where they discovered a 19-year-old woman had been shot.

    Man Charged After Accidentally Shooting Girlfriend In Abdomen: Police

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Campaigns In Quebec Riding Ahead Of Federal Byelection

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Campaigns In Quebec Riding Ahead Of Federal Byelection
    Singh has a busy day planned, including going door-to-door with his candidate Gisele Dallaire, a press conference and blueberry pie tasting.

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Campaigns In Quebec Riding Ahead Of Federal Byelection

    Chinese Student Whose Plane Crashed In Canada Declared Dead

    Chinese Student Whose Plane Crashed In Canada Declared Dead
    ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A judge has declared a University of Michigan doctoral student from China dead more than six months after he disappeared before his plane crashed in Canada.

    Chinese Student Whose Plane Crashed In Canada Declared Dead

    Canadian Mint Unveils New $2 Coin Commemorating Vimy Ridge Battle

    Canadian Mint Unveils New $2 Coin Commemorating Vimy Ridge Battle
    CALGARY — The Royal Canadian Mint is paying homage to Canada’s fallen with a special toonie now in circulation for the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Vimy Ridge.

    Canadian Mint Unveils New $2 Coin Commemorating Vimy Ridge Battle

    Toronto Writer's Story Of Sexual Harassment Spurs Others To Share Experiences

    Toronto Writer's Story Of Sexual Harassment Spurs Others To Share Experiences
    A Toronto writer's tweet relating her sexual harassment at the hands of an employer has sparked an online outpouring of similar stories, a discussion she says is the first step in tackling a culture in which such abuses are pervasive.

    Toronto Writer's Story Of Sexual Harassment Spurs Others To Share Experiences

    Almost 800 People Who Survived Isil Now In Canada As Refugees: Ahmed Hussen

    Almost 800 People Who Survived Isil Now In Canada As Refugees: Ahmed Hussen
    OTTAWA — Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen said Thursday nearly 800 Yazidi women and girls and others who survived the cruelties of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant have now arrived in Canada as refugees.

    Almost 800 People Who Survived Isil Now In Canada As Refugees: Ahmed Hussen