With respect to
citizenship and rights, Harper’s cynical neoliberal agenda has had devastating
consequences for some, including thousands of immigrants who have been detained. Increasingly, asylum seekers, permanent residents and other non-Canadian people
are facing difficulties in obtaining citizenship or even staying in the
country.
Crimmigration
refers to the intertwining of criminal law and immigration law. Several bills
have been legislated under Harper’s watch, including C-24, C-31 and C-43 which put into question the notion that Canada is a land of welcome for people
facing harsh conditions in their country of origin, be it due to wars, famine,
or other related reasons. Not only are conditions more difficult for
non-Canadians, but with the passing of C-24 last February, Canadian citizens can
be faced with the revocation of their citizenship as well. If a person is
stripped of citizenship, he or she no longer has any rights as per the Charter, including no rights to have
health care, the ability to work, or the possibility of obtaining a passport.
Since Harper has
been in power, changes to immigration laws have resulted in further
exclusionary practices for foreign nationals who fit a certain profile. This
has led to a swelling of immigration detention. For instance, the Lindsay jail,
a maximum-security facility is currently warehousing several dozen of immigration detainees indefinitely. Since 2013, these detainees
have waged a struggle for the recognition of their rights by undertaking
resistance tactics to draw attention to their plight. Canada is one of only a
handful of states using “administrative detention” to confine non-citizens,
which is in direct contravention of international human rights norms against using facilities to incarcerate the criminalized for the purposes of immigration detention.
Furthermore, refugees
targeted by a security certificate are left in limbo. For instance, Mohamed Harkat, who has exhausted his litigation possibilities faces an uncertain
future. It has been 15 years since he was originally slapped with a certificate
and now has turned to the United Nations in the hopes of finding resolution to
his situation and avoid deportation.
Bill C-31, Protecting Canada’s Immigration System Act,
targets undocumented migrants and imposes new rules to the way such foreign
nationals are treated upon arriving in Canada. According to the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, this bill enables the government
to arbitrarily detain groups of refugees, separate children from their parents, authorize the stripping of permanent residence from refugees, and gives
Ministers broad, unfettered and unprecedented discretion.
Bill C-43, the
Faster Removal of Foreign Criminals Act, introduced in June 2012, eliminates
access to the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD) of the Immigration and Refugee
Board (IRB) for permanent residents or family class members who receive certain
criminal sentences in Canada or are believed to have committed offences outside
Canada (Canadian Bar Association, 2012). This bill also gives the Minister the
discretion to deny entry on “public policy grounds”. This represents a double
punishment where those sentenced not only serve time in prison, but face
deportation upon release.
Bill C-24, the
Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act, provides the government with increased
powers to strip Canadians of their citizenship. Historically, citizenship
revocation has been used not only in the case of foreign nationals who
fraudulently apply for citizenship, but also to get rid of certain
groups, for instance, naturalized Canadians believed to be Communists, back in
the 1920s. Essentially the legislation aims to introduce a two-tiered system of
citizenship, Canadian-born and naturalized citizens. It introduces the
possibility of stripping citizenship from citizens who have or could get a
second citizenship, if they are guilty of committing a terrorist offence. This
legislation is an exclusionary piece of legislation because over 70% of Canadians
who have dual citizenship are naturalized and not Canadian born. But Canadian
citizenship has also been stripped of Canadian-born people, rendering them
“stateless”. This is the case of Deepan Budlakoti,
who, though born on Canadian soil, has had his citizenship revoked on the
grounds of a criminal (non terrorist) offence for which he has served the time.
Considerable
changes have been brought forth by the Harper government that change the
conditions for citizens, both naturalized and Canadian-born, as well as to
every status of person residing in Canada.
Such changes can be interpreted as the continuation of governing by
exception and is tantamount to a liquidation of democracy (Tingsten, 1934,
333, in Agamben, 2000, The State of
Exception, 7). Banning entire categories of people and detaining them
indefinitely is a grave step backwards, and a complete abnegation of
international human right norms.
BACK TO THE MARCH 2015 EDITION OF TCPC-CANADA
BACK TO THE MARCH 2015 EDITION OF TCPC-CANADA
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