Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

With 650 Yazidis Now In Canada, Officials Say Target Of 1,200 In Sight

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Nov, 2017 11:39 AM
  • With 650 Yazidis Now In Canada, Officials Say Target Of 1,200 In Sight
OTTAWA — A promise to resettle 1,200 people who escaped torture and persecution at the hands of Islamic militants is within reach by the end of the year, immigration officials said Tuesday.
 
A total of 807 people had arrived in Canada by the end of October and another 1,383 files are in process, officials told the House of Commons immigration committee.
 
Of those already here, 81 per cent are Yazidi, a minority sect from Iraq specifically targeted by Islamic militants over the course of the conflict in Iraq.
 
The House of Commons unanimously passed a motion in 2016 calling the persecution of Yazidis a genocide and committing to provide asylum to Yazidi women and girls. 
 
A subsequent commitment to bringing in 1,200 people by the end of 2017 was made last February.
 
Islamic State militants have taken a systematic approach to trying to eradicate the Yazidi population since the outbreak of conflict in Iraq in 2014.
 
Some 200,000 Yazidis were displaced in the initial clashes between militants, Iraqi government forces and the Kurdish militia. Yazidi women, girls and boys were routinely sold into slavery, while older men were forced to convert or be killed.
 
"Given the extensive trauma these individuals have survived, including torture, sexual violence, death of their family members in front of them, there are a tremendous amount of psychosocial supports that need to be put in place," Dawn Edlund, an official with Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, told the committee.
 
The newcomers have largely been settled in four cities — Winnipeg, Calgary, Toronto and London, Ont., — because there were already pockets of Yazidis there to help provide some of that support, Edlund said.
 
Still, finding translators who can speak the Yazidi's primary language of Kurmanji has been among the issues newcomers have already faced.
 
 
The resettlement program has also been complicated by a number of other factors.
 
Refugees are not generally tracked by religion or ethnicity and figuring out which among those seeking resettlement were Yazidi required the population to, in part, self-identify. The UN and other partners agencies also sought to find candidates.
 
Some Yazidis have argued the UN discriminates against them, because their staff in the region are Muslim, aren't interested in helping, and delay processing their forms, Conservative MP Michelle Rempel told the committee Tuesday.
 
Meanwhile, only a fraction of Yazidis live in the refugee camps that are the traditional source of UN resettlement efforts. For those displaced within Iraq, resettlement has required the consent of local government.

MORE National ARTICLES

Toronto Family Seeks Compensation For Trashed Home In 'Horrific' Rental-Gone-Wrong

Toronto Family Seeks Compensation For Trashed Home In 'Horrific' Rental-Gone-Wrong
Thieves made off with a 50-inch TV, treasured family heirlooms and a carefully curated sneaker collection, but it's their son's plundered piggy bank that really upsets Daniel Habashi and Andrea Van Leeuwen.

Toronto Family Seeks Compensation For Trashed Home In 'Horrific' Rental-Gone-Wrong

Federal Government Issues Ultimatum Over Broken Rail Line To Churchill

Federal Government Issues Ultimatum Over Broken Rail Line To Churchill
WINNIPEG — The federal government is threatening to sue the owner of a broken rail line that has left people in the northern Manitoba town of Churchill without a land connection to the outside world.

Federal Government Issues Ultimatum Over Broken Rail Line To Churchill

Manslaughter Charges Possible For Fentanyl Dealers: B.C. Public Safety Minister

Manslaughter Charges Possible For Fentanyl Dealers: B.C. Public Safety Minister
Mike Farnworth, who is also solicitor general, says the NDP government is considering tougher penalties against fentanyl dealers.

Manslaughter Charges Possible For Fentanyl Dealers: B.C. Public Safety Minister

Murder Charge Dropped Against Newfoundland Man Accused Of Killing Home Invader

Murder Charge Dropped Against Newfoundland Man Accused Of Killing Home Invader
Gilbert Budgell was charged with second-degree murder in the shooting of one of two masked men who entered his Botwood house in central Newfoundland in April 2016.

Murder Charge Dropped Against Newfoundland Man Accused Of Killing Home Invader

B.C. Man Suffered Severe Injuries In Fatal Encounter With Police, Watchdog Says

B.C. Man Suffered Severe Injuries In Fatal Encounter With Police, Watchdog Says
VANCOUVER — British Columbia's police watchdog is shedding light on the severe injuries suffered by a man during a deadly encounter with Vancouver police in a court document seeking an order for an officer to be interviewed as a witness.

B.C. Man Suffered Severe Injuries In Fatal Encounter With Police, Watchdog Says

Canadian Home Sales Gain Ground In September, But Down From Year Ago Mark

Canadian Home Sales Gain Ground In September, But Down From Year Ago Mark
OTTAWA — The number of homes sold in September climbed for the second month in a row after a slowdown earlier this year that was led by a cooling in the Toronto market.

Canadian Home Sales Gain Ground In September, But Down From Year Ago Mark