Nahraf
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Few Tamil refugees have family members in Canada. This means this was financial help may be provided for them from Canada. There is immigration system and they should have followed rules. But some people rather pay money risk lives to come quickly to Canada. This will create temporary backlash in Canada against Tamils and Tamil Tigers. The Tamil Tiger's front organization have became active to support these refugees. These refugees if given permanent status in Canada will be be contributing to Tamil Tigers rest of their lives.
Child Charity Report: 30-50 Tamil Children Seek Refugee Status in Canada
30-50 Tamil Children Seek Refugee Status in Canada
14/8/2010 - At least 30 and as many as 50 of the 490 Tamil refugees arriving in Vancouver yesterday are children.
Even while the 490 Tamil refugees aboard the MV Sun Sea were far from the shores of British Columbia, provisions were being made on how to house and house the asylum seekers. Including large numbers of women and children, the refugees set sail from Sri Lanka.
As of current information, 30-50 of the children are thought to be children. Officials will have to make decisions as to whether or not the children will be placed in foster care while the adult are being processed.
In search of solutions, many have looked backward in time to precedents set in 1999, when 600 people from China's Fujian province arrived in B.C.. These refugees were temporarily housed outside Vancouver, before the children came under the protection of the Ministry of Children and Family Development and elderly refugees were admitted to seniors homes in Burnaby. The children were given English lessons, food and shelter at the cost of approximately $8 000 per month.
Thankfully, most of the refugees were in a fine state of health and did not require urgent medical attention. Two pregnant women, one six year-old infant and five others were admitted to Victoria General Hospital.
Activist groups are already mobilizing on behalf f the refugees. Canada, as a signatory to the binding United Nations Convention on Refugees, has pledged that it will not return refugees to a country where they do indeed face persecution (an illegal practice in the international community known as renfoulement).
Men will be temporarily housed in the Wilkinson Road Jail, before being transferred (likely to the Fraser Regional Correctional Centre) until their applications for asylum are approved or declined. The women will be housed at the Alouette Correctional Centre for Women. Like in the case of the Chinese refugees in 1999, women accompanied by children, as well as any unaccompanied minors, will be kept together and will come under the care of the Ministry of Children and Family Development.
Arriving yesterday, B.C. authorities continue to process their arrival in Esquimalt. How long this process will take is difficult to estimate, but could take anywhere from days to weeks. CBC reports that the refugees are expected to attain refugee status, given the persecution they may face in their homeland.
After processing, the refugees are bound for detention centres on Vancouver Island and parts of mainland B.C. Detention hearings, slated to being on Monday, will seek out whether or not any among the refugees have links to the Tamil Tigers, which is deemed a terrorist organization in Canada. The RCMP is likely to assist.
Child Charity Report: 30-50 Tamil Children Seek Refugee Status in Canada
30-50 Tamil Children Seek Refugee Status in Canada
14/8/2010 - At least 30 and as many as 50 of the 490 Tamil refugees arriving in Vancouver yesterday are children.
Even while the 490 Tamil refugees aboard the MV Sun Sea were far from the shores of British Columbia, provisions were being made on how to house and house the asylum seekers. Including large numbers of women and children, the refugees set sail from Sri Lanka.
As of current information, 30-50 of the children are thought to be children. Officials will have to make decisions as to whether or not the children will be placed in foster care while the adult are being processed.
In search of solutions, many have looked backward in time to precedents set in 1999, when 600 people from China's Fujian province arrived in B.C.. These refugees were temporarily housed outside Vancouver, before the children came under the protection of the Ministry of Children and Family Development and elderly refugees were admitted to seniors homes in Burnaby. The children were given English lessons, food and shelter at the cost of approximately $8 000 per month.
Thankfully, most of the refugees were in a fine state of health and did not require urgent medical attention. Two pregnant women, one six year-old infant and five others were admitted to Victoria General Hospital.
Activist groups are already mobilizing on behalf f the refugees. Canada, as a signatory to the binding United Nations Convention on Refugees, has pledged that it will not return refugees to a country where they do indeed face persecution (an illegal practice in the international community known as renfoulement).
Men will be temporarily housed in the Wilkinson Road Jail, before being transferred (likely to the Fraser Regional Correctional Centre) until their applications for asylum are approved or declined. The women will be housed at the Alouette Correctional Centre for Women. Like in the case of the Chinese refugees in 1999, women accompanied by children, as well as any unaccompanied minors, will be kept together and will come under the care of the Ministry of Children and Family Development.
Arriving yesterday, B.C. authorities continue to process their arrival in Esquimalt. How long this process will take is difficult to estimate, but could take anywhere from days to weeks. CBC reports that the refugees are expected to attain refugee status, given the persecution they may face in their homeland.
After processing, the refugees are bound for detention centres on Vancouver Island and parts of mainland B.C. Detention hearings, slated to being on Monday, will seek out whether or not any among the refugees have links to the Tamil Tigers, which is deemed a terrorist organization in Canada. The RCMP is likely to assist.