04)
SCRAP BILL C-50, URGES
NO ONE IS ILLEGAL
(The
following
articles are from the May 1-15, 2008, issue of People's Voice, Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
source is credited. Subscription rates in Canada: $25/year, or $12 low
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Joint
statement from No One Is Illegal (Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal), and
Solidarity Across Borders.
Recently the
Conservative government introduced a series of amendments to the
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA), buried in Bill C-50, a
136-page "budget implementation bill". This fundamentally undemocratic
move sneaks in critical changes to Canada's immigration policy without
proposing any of those changes before Parliament. By making it a matter
of confidence, the government forces Opposition parties to either
accept them or call an election.
This series of amendments places more arbitrary power in the hands of
the Immigration Minister:
- Under the
existing s. 11 of the IRPA, anyone who meets the already stringent
criteria to enter Canada as a worker, student, visitor, or permanent
resident, shall be granted that status. However, under the proposed
changes, despite meeting the criteria, the Minister will have the
discretion to arbitrarily reject an application.
- Sec. 25
currently says that the Minister "shall" examine a Humanitarian and
Compassionate application - this is changed to "shall" examine the
H&C application if the applicant is in Canada, but only "may"
examine the application if the applicant is outside Canada. Although
the government claims will have no impact on family reunification, in
practice it will have a serious impact on family reunification as
H&C applications are one of the most frequent avenues for family
reunification (for example separated refugee children).
- Proposed s. 87.3
of the Act will allow the Minister to issue "instructions" setting
quotas on the "category" of person that can enter Canada - including
quotas based on country of origin. This unprecedented modification of
IRPA would risk putting in place implicit equivalents to the Chinese
Exclusion Act of 1923, the Order in Council of 1911 prohibiting the
landing of " any immigrant belonging to the Negro race", that of 1923
excluding "any immigrant of any Asiatic race", or the "None is too
many" rule applied to fleeing Nazi-occupied Europe during the Second
World War.
- Ministerial
power in deciding the order in which new applications are processed,
regardless of when they were filed. This means prioritizing immigration
applicants based on their ability to fulfill the needs of the Canadian
job market, "whether it's people to wash dishes and make sandwiches, or
whether it's the highly skilled engineers", as stated by Minister Diane
Finley. This is a profoundly dehumanizing and racist conception of
immigrants as disposable commodities.
- New sections
87.3 (4) and (5) of the IRPA would allow the Minister to simply hold on
to, return, or throw out a visa application and deny any opportunity to
review that decision in Court. This precedent is truly alarming,
especially in the context of a deeply flawed appeals process, including
the existing lack of implementation of a Refugee Appeal Division,
despite being provided for under IRPA.
The
Conservatives argue that these changes are necessary to "modernize" the
immigration system and reduce the existing backlog. However, the true
objective is clear from Finance Minister Jim Flaherty's comments that
the government seeks a "competitive immigration system which will
quickly process skilled immigrants who can make an immediate
contribution to the economy."
The major
lobby behind these changes comes from employers' organizations and
business lobbies. Indeed, bill C-50 is being praised primarily by
business associations. Philip Hochstein, president of the Independent
Contractors and Businesses Association of British Columbia, has stated
that the government is moving in the right direction by focusing on
Canada's economic needs, "We need strong, young, willing workers to
come, much like the people who built this country."
Mr. Hochstein
seems to forget the historical exploitation of immigrant workers, the
most well-known example of which is the Chinese railway workers. The
estimated 17,000 Chinese workers who came to Canada from 1881-1884 were
met with dangerous working conditions and discrimination upon their
arrival. Chinese workers earned $1 a day, and it is estimated that
anywhere from 1500-2500 Chinese migrants died during the construction
of the railway. As soon as this dangerous work was completed, the
message was clear: Chinese people were no longer welcome.
These
proposed legislative changes come in the context of a global capitalist
and nationalist reinforcement of labour flexibility as the guiding
principle of immigration policy, where migrants are only as valuable as
their labour. It is clear that the priorities will be relatively
wealthy people applying under the skilled worker program and investor
classes, as well as increasingly vulnerable temporary migrant workers.
Immigration policy will serve the needs of Canadian industry by
regulating migration and providing a flexible labour pool rather than
upholding the dignity of migrants.
These changes
are directly in line with Canada's commitment to the Security and
Prosperity Partnership, which lays out the need for a rapid expansion
of both "low-skill" temporary guest worker programs and "high-skill"
professionals. In Canada today, the number of people admitted each year
on temporary worker visas is greater than the number admitted as
permanent residents. We must reject temporary migrant worker programs
of indentured servitude and call for the unconditional right of migrant
workers to permanent residency and labour rights equal to those of
citizens.
At the same
time, such changes comes at the deliberate expense of refugees,
non-status migrants, or those seeking family reunification- who are
seen as increasingly "undesirable" and potential security threats in
light of repressive post 9/11 controls. Decisions such as the $101
million arming of Canadian border guards; the establishment of Canadian
Border Services Agency as an enforcement division in processing refugee
claims that sends the message that refugee claimants are a threat to
public safety; the ongoing unjust use of Security Certificates against
non-citizens; the implementation of the Safe Third Country Agreement
between the Canada and US which has drastically reduced the number of
asylum seekers able to make a claim in Canada; and increasing rates of
deportation to over 13,000 a year from Canada have all perpetuated a
racist, anti-poor, and anti-migrant agenda.
This agenda
is normalized due to the heightened racialized national identity of
Canada that continuously places racialized immigrants (although not
white immigrants) as "Outsiders" to the Canadian nation. For example,
much of the opposition to this Bill has challenged the secretive
process behind the bill, while still accepting the norm that "Canada
should be able to select its preferred immigrants", thus feeding into
the commodification of migrants and the assertion of Canada's sovereign
and racist right to select who it allows to remain, as reminiscent
through the Chinese Exclusion Act, Japanese-Canadian internment, and
Komagatamaru incident. Therefore although nothing new, in the post 9/11
climate, we are witnessing an escalation of attacks against
"immigrants" - the eternally hyphenated citizens- for example through
the reasonable accommodation' hearings, the wearing of the hijab and
turban, the phenomenon of "nippertipping" against Asian-Canadians, and
many more. The constant questioning of immigrants (although most are
long-time citizens) "ability to integrate", their "suspicious
behaviours", their "overburdening of the system", and their "Third
World traditions" reveals an incredibly shallow multiculturalism.
This mutual
reinforcement of corporate and state interests - cheap labour and
national identity, respectively - evident in the prioritization of
labour market needs within the global War on Terror, is legitimized not
only by recourse to colonial and racist discourse but also by the
constant cultivation of fear in the hearts and minds of citizens. The
production of migrants as disposable commodities goes in tandem with
their construction as the dangerous "Other" or "The Enemy Within" as
the threat they pose can be tamed through a process of commodification
and the withholding of citizenship rights as a mechanism of social
control. Fear of the "dangerous Other" thus underwrites the production
of exclusivist nationalist identity (and therefore support for the
state) while fear of the "commodifiable Other" (as "stealing"
employment and eroding the social system) produces fearful and
disciplined citizens vulnerable to increasing corporate exploitation
and state repression.
Therefore,
the general message to poor and working people of colour and their
families - the overwhelming majority of migrants from the Global South
- is that they need not apply as permanent residents unless they are
willing to come as temporary workers in exploitative jobs and whose
status will be legally reinforced as "non-Canadians". This is
particularly revolting in a context where the Canadian government and
Canadian corporations actively participate in the creation and
reinforcement of a system of global displacement of migrants and
refugees who are fleeing poverty, persecution, war and corporate
exploitation of their lands.
In light of
this reality, we call for an end to deportation and detentions and a
comprehensive, transparent, inclusive and ongoing regularization
program that is equitable and accessible to all persons living without
permanent residency in Canada to ensure free migration and full rights
for all those who seek them. We also call for the abolition of
agreements such as NAFTA and the SPP, which are making Canadian borders
increasingly open to capital and those who represent capital, while at
the same time restricting the movement of those who have been displaced
by these very same neoliberal policies.
At a most
basic level, we must also challenge the notion that some migrants are
more worthy than others; we believe that freedom of movement is a
fundamental human right and we struggle for a world in which no one is
forced to migrate against their will and where people can move freely
in order to live and flourish in justice and dignity.
We encourage
allies across Canada to march in solidarity with all migrants and
refugees to demand STATUS FOR ALL!: In Toronto, join us on May 3 at
noon at Christie Pits; in Montreal, join us on May 4 at 12:30 pm at the
corner of Victoria & Van Horne. Other actions across Canada to be
announced.