Monday, May 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Stop CBSA Policy Requiring Bulletproof Vests In Immigrant Detention: Advocates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jul, 2019 08:41 PM
  • Stop CBSA Policy Requiring Bulletproof Vests In Immigrant Detention: Advocates

OTTAWA - A group of doctors, lawyers, legal scholars and human-rights organizations is calling on the federal government to halt the rollout of a new policy that will see border officers outfitted in defensive gear when dealing with refugees in detention.

 

The group is making a third entreaty to Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale urging him to cancel the policy, which is due to take effect first at the migrant holding centre in Toronto on Monday.

 

They believe the policy requiring Canada Border Services Agency staff to wear defensive gear while working with detained migrants goes against international standards that say migrants in detention should not be kept in prison-like conditions.

 

The agency adopted the new uniform policy last year after it moving what it deems "higher-risk immigration detainees'' from provincial jails, where they were being held for security purposes, into one of the agency's three immigration holding centres.

 

The mandatory equipment includes batons, pepper spray and bulletproof vests.

 

Anthony Navaneelan, a lawyer with the Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers, says those being held in detention are often vulnerable refugees, including some children, largely being held for administrative reasons and should not be criminalized.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man who praised Quebec mosque shooter in online videos gets 30 days in jail

The sentence handed to Pierre Dion of Terrebonne, Que., went beyond what the Crown had recommended.

Man who praised Quebec mosque shooter in online videos gets 30 days in jail

Canadian general says Islamic State defeated but ideology 'alive and well'

"Daesh or ISIS in Iraq or northeast Syria has been defeated in the sense that they are no longer a quasi-state," said Brig.-Gen. Colin Keiver

Canadian general says Islamic State defeated but ideology 'alive and well'

Ottawa passes legislation that bans whale and dolphin captivity in Canada

The federal bill, which now only requires royal assent to become law, will phase out the practice of holding cetaceans — such as whales, dolphins and porpoises — in captivity, but grandfathers in those that are already being kept at two facilities in the country.

Ottawa passes legislation that bans whale and dolphin captivity in Canada

Styrofoam take-out boxes and straws among expected targets of plastics ban

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government is starting the regulatory work to ban toxic single-use plastics because the garbage infiltrating the world's waterways is out of hand.

Styrofoam take-out boxes and straws among expected targets of plastics ban

New Manitoba plan contains no carbon tax, higher carbon emissions level

That's less than half the almost 2 1/2-megatonne reduction target the Tories originally announced in 2017.

New Manitoba plan contains no carbon tax, higher carbon emissions level

Dog who saved owner from bear among 3 rescues inducted into hall of fame

Organizers say Shelby and two other heroic hounds — all rescues — are being recognized for life-saving acts of perseverance and intuition.

Dog who saved owner from bear among 3 rescues inducted into hall of fame