Canada working with US to deal with countries slow in accepting detainees
2/8/2025 6:10
Canada is working with the
United States to "deal with" countries reluctant to accept
deportees as both nations increase efforts to ship migrants back
to their home countries, according to a government document seen
by Reuters.
Since President Donald Trump began his second term in January,
the United States has cracked down on migrants in the country
illegally. But the U.S. has at times struggled to remove people
as quickly as it would like in part because of countries'
unwillingness to accept them.
As Canada has increased deportations, which reached a
decade-high last year, it has also run up against countries
reluctant to accept deportees. Canadian officials issued a
single-use travel document in June to a Somali man they wanted
to deport because Somalia would not provide him with travel
documents.
In a redacted message to an unknown recipient, cited in a
February 28 email, the director general of international affairs
for Canada's Immigration Department wrote, "Canada will also
continue working with the United States to deal with countries
recalcitrant on removals to better enable both Canada and the
United States to return foreign nationals to their home
countries."
The department referred questions about the message to the
Canada Border Services Agency, which declined to specify how
Canada and the U.S. were cooperating, when the cooperation
started, and whether the working relationship had changed this
year.
"Authorities in Canada and the United States face common
impediments to the removal of inadmissible persons, which can
include uncooperative foreign governments that refuse the return
of their nationals or to issue timely travel documents," an
agency spokesperson wrote in an email.
"While Canada and the United States do not have a formal
bilateral partnership that is specific to addressing this
challenge, the Canada Border Services Agency continues to work
regularly and closely with United States law enforcement
partners on matters of border security."
When the email was sent, then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
was in his last days in office before being replaced in March by
Prime Minister Mark Carney. The Canada-U.S. relationship was
strained by Trump's threat of tariffs, which he said were partly
a response to migrants illegally entering the U.S. from Canada.
The spokesperson added the CBSA has committed to deporting
more people, from 18,000 in the last fiscal year to 20,000 in
each of the next two years.
Immigration has become a contentious topic in Canada as some
politicians blame migrants for a housing and cost-of-living
crisis.
The rise in Canada's deportations largely reflects an increased
focus on deporting failed refugee claimants. Refugee lawyers say
that could mean some people are sent back to countries where
they face danger while they try to contest their deportation.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
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