OTTAWA, March 25 (NNN-AGENCIES) — A new US-Canada border deal meant to halt the flow of asylum seekers at unofficial border crossings will go into effect at midnight on Saturday.
Migrants caught after that will be returned to an official border crossing, the countries said.
Large numbers of migrants have been making unsanctioned crossings via Roxham Road at the US-Canada border.
The move closes a loophole in an agreement between the two nations on where migrants may claim asylum.
The amendment is part of efforts to limit an influx of migrants at Roxham Road, an unofficial crossing between New York state and the province of Quebec.
A record number of migrants – some 40,000 – crossed into Canada last year, the vast majority of which entered at Roxham Road.
As part of the new deal, Canada will also create a new refugee programme for 15,000 migrants fleeing persecution and violence in South and Central America, the prime minister’s office (PMO) said.
The original 2004 agreement, the Safe Third Country Act (STCA), requires migrants to make an asylum claim in the first “safe” country they reach, whether it is the US or Canada.
It allowed either nation to turn migrants away at official points of entry – but not at unofficial crossing points, like Roxham Road.
The new deal extends the agreement along the entire border, including internal waterways, the prime minister’s office said in a statement.
The US side has also seen a rise in migrant crossings into Canada.
Biden’s administration has also proposed to crack down on asylum seekers at the US southern border with Mexico by making it harder for migrants to claim asylum once Covid border controls lift in May.
The announcement of the border closings comes as President Joe Biden is in Ottawa, Canada, for 24 hours to discuss a series of economic, trade and immigration issues with his Canadian counterpart, Justin Trudeau.
Security is heavy in Canada’s national capital for the presidential visit.
While in Canada, the president has spoken of the importance of the deep economic ties and the defence alliances between the two nations, as well as their joint support for Ukraine.
Also discussed was the ongoing instability in Haiti, where the economy is in crisis and gang violence and kidnappings have risen sharply.
The US has pushed Canada to lead an international force to support security forces in the Caribbean country.
On Friday, however, both Biden and Trudeau said they do not believe an intervention is the way forward at the moment.
“The biggest thing we can do, and it’s going to take time, is to increase the prospect of the police department in Haiti having the capacity to deal with the problems,” Biden said at a joint press conference.
He added the instability “is a real, genuine concern,” as ongoing gang violence could leave a large number of Haitians displaced.
The two countries also announced they will lead a new “global coalition” on the opioid crisis. It will look to tackle the issue of drug trafficking not only in North America, but across the world. — NNN-AGENCIES