Reform of rules on refugees’ loss of status urgent following new court decision


Published: 2 Jun 2016

This press release was published by the Canadian Council for Refugees (CCR) and the Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers (CARL) on 4 May 2016. It has been lightly edited for style.

The Canadian Council for Refugees (CCR) and the Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers (CARL) today called on the government to move urgently to amend the law in the wake of the Federal Court of Appeal’s recent decision in Bermudez. The Court found that the government is legally obliged in certain circumstances to try to strip refugees of their status in Canada and that only Parliament can fix the problem.

Mr Bermudez is facing a cessation application (loss of refugee status) which if successful will mean he also loses permanent residence and faces removal from Canada. The Court found that officers cannot consider the situation of his Canadian spouse or three Canadian children even though the family’s primary breadwinner could lose the right to work and remain in Canada. The family finds itself in this situation not because Mr. Bermudez has done anything wrong, but because of changes made in 2012 to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act which mean that people who are no longer refugees also lose their permanent residence.

“The law is clearly absurd: Canadians do not want to see law-abiding former refugees stripped of their status – even people who have Canadian children or spouses – simply because they no longer need Canada’s protection,” said Loly Rico, CCR President. “Refugee status is supposed to give people protection, but the Bermudez decision shows that permanent residents who came as refugees are actually more vulnerable to loss of status than other permanent residents. Former refugees now feel very insecure because of the threat of cessation: they thought that having permanent residence meant that they were safe in Canada, but since 2012 that is no longer true.”

“This law wastes millions of dollars to fund a search through Canada’s inventory of old refugees to see who can be disposed of, regardless of how well established they are in Canada, and for no purpose,” said CARL President Mitchell Goldberg. “This needs to stop. Targeting recognized refugees for loss of status is particularly offensive at a time when Canadians are coming together to commit their own personal funds, and the government has devoted substantial resources to protect  refugees in need. The Bermudez decision entrenches a law that has no purpose other than to harass vulnerable refugees.”

Pursuing cessation and vacation applications became a priority for the Canada Border Services Agency after 2012, and special funding was set aside for this purpose, reported to have been as much as CAD 15 million over four years. The 2012-13 Supplementary Estimates show that CAD 2.8 million was allocated to the CBSA and CAD 1.8 million to the Department of Justice. It is unclear whether the government has tracked the cost of the large increase in cessation applications to other agencies and institutions including the Federal Court, the Immigration and Refugee Board and Citizenship and Immigration Canada (now Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada).

Documents recently released under the Access to Information Act confirm that officers at Citizenship and Immigration Canada have been trained to look for cessation cases among those applying for permanent resident cards or citizenship or seeking to sponsor family members. Cases are deliberately put on hold while cessation applications are pursued. While extra resources have been dedicated to stripping refugees of their status, shortages of resources have led to refugees facing long delays to receive permanent residence and reunite with family members.

At the end of December 2015 there were 256 cessation cases pending at the Immigration and Refugee Board.

The cessation measures also apply to resettled Syrian refugees, who could face loss of status in Canada if they are shown in the future to no longer be refugees.

Contacts

Janet Dench, CCR Executive Director, 514-277-7223, 514-602-2098 (cell), jdench@ccrweb.ca

Mitchell Goldberg, CARL President, 514-844-7528, mitchell.goldberg@gmail.com

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