Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Take up case of 700 Punjabi students deportation from Canada: Sukhbir Badal

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Mar, 2023 10:48 AM
  • Take up case of 700 Punjabi students deportation from Canada: Sukhbir Badal

Chandigarh, March 17 (IANS) Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) President Sukhbir Badal on Friday requested Union External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar to take up the case of 700 Punjabi students, who face imminent deportation from Canada due to no fault of theirs, with the Canadian authorities.

In a statement here, the SAD President said 700 students who had received deportation letters from the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) after their admission offer letters submitted to an Ontario-based public college were found to be fake were duped by an education migration service company.

"The students are victims of a scam perpetrated on them. Acting against them will not only endanger their future but will virtually destroy 700 families as the parents of the students have spent their hard earned money to educate their wards in Canada with the hope of being granted Permanent Residency (PR)."

Giving details of the case, Badal said the students paid Rs 16 to Rs 20 lakh to the company which purportedly facilitated their admission in Humber College in Ontario by generating fake admission offer letters along with fake fee deposit receipts.

"The students were given visas on the basis of this forgery by the Canadian embassy." He said upon arrival in Canada the company informed the students that their admission to Humber University had been cancelled and facilitated their admission to another institution after taking a commission between Rs 5 to Rs 6 lakh.

Badal said the scam, however, came to light when some of the students applied for PR and their documents were scrutinized. "The fact that the students were made to sign their applications as self-applicants by the company has put the entire blame of the forgery on them. It is also a fact that the fraud could have been detected at the very onset if the Canadian embassy issuing visas to the students had conducted a scrutiny of their college offer letter."

Urging the External Affairs Minister to apprise the Canadian government about the entire case, besides stressing that the students had fallen victim to a scam, Badal said "the Canadian authorities should be requested to consider this case sympathetically on humanitarian grounds."

MORE National ARTICLES

94% of Surrey police vow not to join RCMP: union

94% of Surrey police vow not to join RCMP: union
A statement from the Surrey Police Union says 94 per cent of its members have signed a pledge to refuse to apply to, or join, the Mounties, if newly elected Surrey Mayor Brenda Locke makes good on a campaign promise to cancel the city's switch from the national police force to a municipal one.

94% of Surrey police vow not to join RCMP: union

Man arrested over alleged assault regarding ice cream confrontation

Man arrested over alleged assault regarding ice cream confrontation
The victim, a convenience store, shared that when the suspect was spoken to about not paying for ice cream, he began to strike the staff member and brandished a knife. Charges related to assault with a weapon and breach of conditions are being recommended.

Man arrested over alleged assault regarding ice cream confrontation

Interest rate hikes may halt economic growth: PBO

Interest rate hikes may halt economic growth: PBO
In that scenario, the Canadian economy would contract by 0.3 per cent in 2023 and grow by 1.3 per cent in 2024. The PBO says this analysis represents only one of many possible scenarios that could play out in the Canadian economy.   

Interest rate hikes may halt economic growth: PBO

Canada's immigration backlog drops to 2.4 mn people

Canada's immigration backlog drops to 2.4 mn people
The data showed a large reduction in the backlog of temporary residence applications while the permanent residence backlog registered a slight increase. The permanent residence inventory stood at 506,421 people as of November 3, compared to 505,562 as of October 3. 

Canada's immigration backlog drops to 2.4 mn people

Tam warns of flu upswing, COVID variant 'growth'

Tam warns of flu upswing, COVID variant 'growth'
Chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam said Thursday in a virtual update that the triple threat of all three viruses is posing a challenge for the health system in several parts of the country and points to the need for "stepped up precautions."

Tam warns of flu upswing, COVID variant 'growth'

Man who killed girlfriend, toddler to be sentenced

Man who killed girlfriend, toddler to be sentenced
Robert Leeming, who is 37, pleaded guilty to the second-degree murder of Jasmine Lovett, but not guilty in the death of 22-month-old Aliyah Sanderson. He was convicted earlier this year of second-degree murder in the child's death.

Man who killed girlfriend, toddler to be sentenced