Montreal Struggles to House Haitian Asylum-Seekers Fleeing United States
Montreal Struggles to House Haitian Asylum-Seekers Fleeing United States
The Canadian city of Montreal opened the grounds of one of its largest stadiums to asylum-seekers fleeing the United States.Hundreds of refugees began moving into the city’s former Olympic Stadium on Monday, taking up temporary residence in a public hall.Outfitted with dozens of cots, internet service, locker room showers, and concession stands, the makeshift shelter is being outfitted to accommodate at least 300 people.Quebecois authorities said unprecedented numbers of asylum-seekers have been crossing the U.S.-Canada land border over the course of the past month.Some 1,500 men and women have sought refuge in the francophone province, marking a nigh-tenfold increase from July of 2016.“We’re stretched almost to the limit,” said Francine Dupuis to The New York Times. Dupuis is a spokeswoman for the Quebec government agency tasked with handling new arrivals.According to the Times, many of the refugees are crossing into Canada through New York, Vermont, and Maine. By avoiding official border crossings and simply sneaking through into Quebec, the hopeful migrants are able to flout ‘a 13-year old agreement between the United States and Canada requiring asylum seekers to assert their claim in the country they arrive in first.’Under the confines of the Safe Third Country Agreement, anyone who stakes a claim to asylum at an official border crossing ‘must be denied refuge and sent back.’ However, dodging the formality of declaration and entering a country unofficially effectively renders the treaty moot.Many of the refugee claimants settling into Montreal’s Olympic Stadium originally hail from Haiti and have been living in the United States legally for years.Thousands of Haitians were allowed into America following the country’s devastating earthquake in 2010.In May, President Donald Trump announced he wouldn’t extend the ‘temporary protection status’ afforded to Haitians who fled from disaster.
Members of the Canadian military are assisting with the influx of asylum-seekers by constructing tent housing for the refugees near the U.S. border. Image courtesy of Graham Hughes, Canadian Press via CBC News.
Sources
Facing Wave of Refugees, Montreal Opens Up Stadium for HousingMilitary builds camp to house surge of asylum seekers at Quebec borderMontreal demanded to open more asylum shelters as refugees overload Olympic Stadium location
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.