Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

North Korean refugees will be screened: Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Oct, 2021 04:36 PM
  • North Korean refugees will be screened: Canada

OTTAWA - The government says North Koreans heading to Canada under a new private sponsorship scheme will face health and security screening before being allowed in.

The Immigration Department says it will also check that refugees fleeing Kim Jong Un's authoritarian regime do not have a criminal background.

Under the new program, Canadian citizens will for the first time be able to privately sponsor North Koreans so they can settle in Canada.

Canada does not usually admit North Koreans because they can safely stay in South Korea.

The government says the immigration minister approved the special policy which will start with a small number of families who have already fled to Thailand. But before being approved to start a new life in Canada they must pass usual checks.

The Immigration Department says HanVoice, a Canadian human rights organization running the program, will be responsible for supporting the North Koreans for a year after they arrive in Canada.

"The focus of the program is to help North Korean women who comprise 80 per cent of the North Korean refugee population," said Sean Chung, executive director of HanVoice. "We are hoping this will be a spark to encourage other countries to create pathways to welcome North Korean refugees."

HanVoice said the pilot program being launched next February will allow Canadian citizens to sponsor five families who have fled to a neighbouring country, such as Thailand.

North Koreans who flee to neighbouring China are sent back and face punishment if caught, while those who make it to Thailand have no official status.

"Under this public policy, a small number of North Korean women and their families outside North Korea may be considered for resettlement to Canada. Once the cases have been referred to the department by HanVoice, the individuals will still need to meet the admissibility criteria to enter Canada," the Immigration Department said in a statement. "This includes health, criminality and security screening."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

WHO chief says it was 'premature' to rule out COVID lab leak

WHO chief says it was 'premature' to rule out COVID lab leak
In a rare departure from his usual deference to powerful member countries, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said getting access to raw data had been a challenge for the international team that traveled to China earlier this year to investigate the source of COVID-19. The first human cases were identified in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

WHO chief says it was 'premature' to rule out COVID lab leak

B.C. fire 'wake-up call' to take precautions: TSB

B.C. fire 'wake-up call' to take precautions: TSB
A wildfire in Lytton, B.C., during historically high temperatures points to a serious need to prevent similar occurrences, says the chairwoman of the Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating the possibility that a freight train could have been linked to the disaster.

B.C. fire 'wake-up call' to take precautions: TSB

Macklem: BoC will respond if inflation too hot

Macklem: BoC will respond if inflation too hot
Tiff Macklem says the central bank largely expects higher prices right now are temporary and the inflation rate will fall back to the bank's two-per-cent target as the economy opens further.

Macklem: BoC will respond if inflation too hot

Wildfires prompt evacuation orders, alerts in B.C.

Wildfires prompt evacuation orders, alerts in B.C.
Evacuation orders affecting more than 1,400 properties are posted for 10 of the 26 fires currently listed by the B.C. Wildfire service as potentially threatening or highly visible.

Wildfires prompt evacuation orders, alerts in B.C.

NDP leader waves off one-time wealth tax

NDP leader waves off one-time wealth tax
In a report today, parliamentary budget officer Yves Giroux estimates that a one-time tax of three per cent and five per cent on Canadians with net wealth over $10 million and $20 million respectively would yield between $44 billion and $61 billion.    

NDP leader waves off one-time wealth tax

Midwestern states urge Canada, U.S. to open border

Midwestern states urge Canada, U.S. to open border
A well-known American advocate of stronger Canada-U.S. ties helped state lawmakers from across the Midwest formally vent their bilateral frustrations Wednesday with an official request that the two countries "immediately" open their shared border to fully vaccinated travellers.

Midwestern states urge Canada, U.S. to open border