Video: Reaction to the Tamil boat: Curious comparisons
By Seth Klein
If the 492 Tamil asylum-seekers who recently arrived by boat on B.C.'s shores are "queue-jumpers," then I guess my parents were too. See, they came as Vietnam War draft dodgers from the U.S. in 1967.
See, they came as Vietnam War draft dodgers from the U.S. in 1967. Like a couple of the Tamil women just arrived, my mom was pregnant with me. My parents did not seek advance permission from the Canadian government to immigrate. They did not fill out any paperwork before arriving. And they could no more seek permission to leave from their home government than these Tamils could, for what they were doing was, as far as the U.S. was concerned, illegal and would result in my father's arrest.
Of course that's the thing about being an asylum-seeker -- you don't get into a queue. When you've got to go, you've got to go. Hell, my folks didn't even know Montreal (where they landed) was a predominantly French-speaking city.
So they just showed up. The difference, however, was that in those days, they got landed immigrant status in 20 minutes at the airport. Imagine that! Over the course of the Vietnam War, about 100,000 American war resisters came to Canada (many with less formal education than my folks and thus unlikely to score particularly well under today's immigration point-system, and I suspect many had less education than many of these recent Tamil arrivals). Yet here we are setting our hair on fire about 492 people.
But those aren't the only numeric comparisons I find curious.
Among the common reactions to the arrival of the MV Sun Sea is the proposition that Canada's alleged lax immigration laws make us a global sucker -- a target for many of the world's migrants. This is an absurd notion.
World conflicts, environmental disasters, and a global economic system that keeps billions impoverished has resulted in millions upon millions of refugees and displaced people. In Pakistan alone, the current flooding is producing, we are told, 14 million internally displaced people. Globally, there are, according to the UN, about 45 million "forcibly displaced people", of which about 15 million are refugees. (You can find good UN statistics on displaced people here.)
But the vast majority of these globally displaced people are being absorbed, not by wealthy countries, but either internally or by neighbouring poor countries -- the places least able to afford the costs and with the bleakest economic prospects.
Canada accepted fewer than 20,000 refugees last year -- a drop in the global bucket (about 0.1 per cent of world refugees) -- and our acceptance rate has been declining in recent years (and in contrast, Canada deported about 13 thousand people). As Stephen Hume notes in an excellent piece in the Vancouver Sun, Canada does not rank as on of the top recipient countries for refugees: "Other developed countries are the destinations for most refugees and many more are granted asylum in those countries... Measured as a ratio of refugee claims to population, Canada doesn't even make the top 10 nations for asylum seekers."
Surely, when a few hundred people arrive on our shores, we can afford to treat these people with respect and grant them due process.
And here's another curious comparison: The real and much more significant Canadian immigration story of recent years (at least measured numerically) isn't about refugees or people arriving by boats. It's about the explosion in temporary foreign workers. Over the past few years, the number of temporary foreign workers coming into Canada each year exceeds 200,000, and now surpasses the number of immigrants.
But the Harper government hasn't been sounding the alarm about this. On the contrary, the federal government has been promoting and facilitating the massive growth in this category of migrants. Why? Because unlike regular immigrants and refugees, these workers are being specifically requested by employers, their indentured status makes them unable to exercise key employment rights and leaves them highly vulnerable to exploitation and unsafe conditions, and they are unable to make the same claims to the social and economic rights that Canadians take for granted.
Immigration is central to the story of Canada -- waves of people who came, mostly to meet a domestic need for labour, and sometimes fleeing harm and conflict. But historically, once people arrived, either as immigrants or refugees, they were upon landing met with a social contract: they could avail themselves of the social and economic rights Canadians enjoyed (such as health care and education for their families, and workplace rights and protections), and in a few years could be granted the full rights of citizenship.
With the explosion of temporary workers (set against a tightening of regular immigration and refugees admissions, and reactions such as those we see directed towards the Tamils), the government is effectively saying, "that deal is off -- we're happy to have temporary indentured labour, but don't think you can be a Canadian."
When my parents arrived in the '60s, a small minority in Canada were keen to label the Vietnam war resisters will all manner of unwelcome labels (much as the Canadian government is currently doing with respect to the Tamil asylum-seekers today, quickly labelling them as terrorists, criminals and queue-jumpers). But for the most part, the Vietnam war resisters were welcomed, and went on to make a valuable contribution to Canadian society. Much the same can be said of the Vietnamese boat people who arrived in the late 1970s. Why can't these better receptions be the norm, rather than the xenophobia that characterizes more recent arrivals?
And here's what troubles me most. In a world still coming to terms with the reality of climate change, the truth is that the number of global climate migrants and displaced people will soon dwarf the UN numbers sited above -- a lot more people are coming, and our recent record does not bode well. Will this recent ugliness mark each new unexpected arrival, or can we chill out and have a rational conversation about what our moral obligations and humanitarian response should be to the global realities ahead? - courtesy: Rabble.ca -
Terrorists, traffickers, and Tamil Tigers? Oh my...
What can be done about Vic Toews' irrational fear of boats?
[Aug 19] Toews insists the MV Sun Sea, which arrived on the BC coast last Thursday carrying just under 500 Tamil refugee claimants, is full of terrorists and human smugglers. But neither recent history nor reliable intelligence seem to back up his claims.
8 Comments
I ask again
If these people are real refugees, why did they ignore a hundred nations between their point of origin (Thailand) and Canada.. including the United States - any one of which would have served the purpose of refuge. ?
Why did they choose to put themselves in danger on a boat instead of flying ? They had perfectly legal passports which enabled them to fly to Thailand in the first place and apparently, funds enough to pay for this voyage . Why not have flown to Canada instead ? Even a first class ticket would have cost much less than what they seem to have paid for a voyage in a rustbucket
Perhaps Seth Klein and the good folk at rabble.ca can stop weeping for just a moment to answer these and a few other questions I have... ?
Or, just like NoOneIsIllegal, HRW and AI, is rabble.ca just another parasite cynically feeding on the (admittedly really GREAT) publicity this issue has generated ?
So with this article now we have got all of our ignorances wiped off our faces and having read the report by the new Amnesty International head on the sliding Canadian reputation as the defender of human rights and other rights of people, lets began to work harder to maintain our Canadian values and its reputation.
''instead of flying''
Tamils from the North would have been ''white'vanned'' before they reach Colombo or even after reaching Colombo., before reaching Katunayake or even after reaching Katunayake.
http://transcurrents.com/tc/2010/08/rajapaksa_onslaught_on_basic_r.html
Rajapaksa onslaught on basic rights is a common threat to all our citizens by Tisaranee Gunasekara, 14 August 2010:
''.... In the South, resistance is possible and, given certain conducive conditions, can become successful. In the North, democratic and peaceful resistance is near impossible, because the regime and its agents can implement any injustice, however abominable, under the cover of security. Once the mantle of security embroidered with patriotic rhetoric,, is used to cover an injustice, not only do victims lose the capacity to protest; the South opts for silent complicity.
According to media reports, 5,000 Tamil families (from Indrapuram and Shanthipuran in Killinochchi, Thiru-Murugandi in Mullaitivu and Munnikulam in Mannar) have been expelled from their villages to make way for cantonments for army families. And 15,000 school children have to study under trees, because their schools have been transformed into IDP camps, and the state, instead of building new schools and new houses, is constructing new military camps and cantonments (new temples too, while demolishing existing temples in the East, to build tourist hotels). ....''
"If these people are real refugees, why did they ignore a hundred nations between their point of origin (Thailand) and Canada.. including the United States - any one of which would have served the purpose of refuge. ?"
Reason:
Thailand, Indonesia, Australia have not provided asylum in the past.
Further Canada is the best bet for asylum seekers, and a land of immigrants
unlike the others mentioned.
mecator, there could be multiple reasons. From my expeorsure I can think of a couple of reasons.
1. Not all the countries in the world are signatories to the UN refugee protection laws and regulations.
2. May have immediate / distant relatives / friends in the country of their target.
But, if you just want to muddy the waters for the real SL Tamil refugees to protect the non existing image of the SL govt then no answer in this world will clear your doubts.
Mecator
the answer is here for your question. I have put the wrong article in my previous posting. please do not post my earlier posting.
http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorialopinion/article/851509--why-refugees-turn-to-smugglers
Thank you to all who responded to me.
Nevertheless, the reasons you give are nothing more than assorted bleeding-heart justification as to why they should be allowed to CANADA.
The refugees claim they are "only sssking refuge from Sinhalas and racist Sri Lanka"
Then why do they have to come to Canada if only reason is refuge ???? India ias thousands of SL Tamil refugees and only 32 miles away. More in Thailand and Australia and the US. They did not even BOTHER to go there
To "Anonymous" who claiimed they would be "white vanned" if they go to Colombo. You conveniently forget/ignore that they actually FLEW to Thailand from Colombo. Unless these Tamils have magical ability to grow wings, then they had to have departed from Colombo airport
No matter how much you try to dress it up., as Sarah Palin said, "you can put lipstick on a pig but it's still a pig"
These people are economic refugees playing a convenient race-card.. nothing more
Unfortunately, the Tamils in Canada have no one to blame except themselves. Canadians saw the true face of Tamils last year