| |

Refugees and the Security Agenda
| “Today’s security strategies suffer from an
overdeveloped military response to collective security threats
and an underdeveloped human security response.” |
| United Nations Development
Programme. Human Development Report 2005 |
Since 9-11, the language and politics of security has worked to
reinforce racism and restrict rights, especially for newcomers to
Canada. Asylum seekers and refugees are particularly affected.
Like other industrialized countries, Canada introduced new immigration
restrictions after the 9-11 attacks:
- When Canada signed the Safe
Third Country Agreement with the US, it virtually closed its
land border to asylum seekers. Asylum claims at the border have
dropped 50% since this agreement came into force in 2004.
- New funding for enforcement post 9-11 placed asylum seekers
at greater risk of detention. One year after 9-11, detention numbers
had grown 41% from 1997 levels.
Other, more subtle effects, have also made themselves felt. Refugee
sponsors are reporting longer processing delays, often attributed
to vaguely defined concerns on “security grounds.” Processing
delays prolong the risk for vulnerable refugees in conflict zones
and extend the agony of waiting to be reunited with family members
already in Canada.
While restrictive migration polices existed well before 9-11, the
subsequent fear of “terrorism” has fostered a climate
in which restrictive migration polices meet little resistance.
KAIROS has developed a series of resources to support Canadians
in rethinking security policies and reaffirming an attitude of welcome
towards refugees and other newcomers.
- Rethinking Security:
A plain language pamphlet that questions current approaches to
security and reaffirms human rights.

- Canadian
Security: Security for all of us. A four page policy brief
focusing on the Safe
Third Country Agreement and its impact on asylum seekers.
- Globalization,
Security and Exclusion. A research paper that traces the link
between economic globalization and growing immigration restrictions.
The paper argues that security justifications for migration controls
since 9-11 obscure the economic motivations for such controls,
which function to maintain the increasing divide between rich
and poor, both across and within international borders. Web published
by the Centre for Refugee Studies, York University.

- Rethinking
Security: Refuge, Power and Privilege. A discussion paper
that explores the multiple impacts of the security agenda on the
movement of refugees and other vulnerable people.

KAIROS has also endorsed the People’s Commission on Immigration
Security Measures. The People’s Commission held public hearings
in Montreal during the spring of 2006 on issues related to the security
certificate process and other security measures under the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, detention, deportation and torture.
To read the final report and recommendations, as well as individual
submissions, go to the Commission website http://www.peoplescommission.ath.cx/framework.php
See also
Top
of page
|
|