Kanada lehnt Tausende Asylanträge ab. Es führt dazu, dass dieser Mann und viele andere Migranten hier in der Schwebe stecken

https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/canada-is-cancelling-thousands-of-asylum-claims-its-leaving-this-man-and-many-other-migrants-stuck-in-limbo-here/article_dee8bcfc-88a6-4529-825d-b029df0f8b3f.html

44 Kommentare

  1. StoryAboutABridge on

    Just deport them and they won’t be in limbo anymore. Problem solved.

  2. Nerevarine123 on

    Deport them and send them the bill for their hotels, flights and healthcare costs. Publically advertise this as the policy for all future claims

    Canada is done being a placemat

  3. CaptaineJack on

    LOL we’re barely doing anything. Deportation can be contested. There are asylum seekers with multiple violent crimes on the record who are still here after 15 years. 

  4. I have sympathy for LEGIT asylum seekers, zero sympathy for the fake ones.

    At the same time, I don’t believe we should be bringing anyone in right now who isn’t either wealthy, has an in-demand skill set or has a legitimate job lined up that isn’t security or timmies. Basically we need people who can support themselves.

    I also theorize that mass migration is being weaponized by countries that benefit from destabilizing the west.

  5. Any international student who submits asylum claim.
    He should be given removal orders right away if he’s not eligible for PGWP. Keep it simple .

  6. Reasonable_Royal7083 on

    how many of those asylum cames came after the student visa ended – 99.9% of cases?

  7. ButtExplosion on

    The entire asylum program needs to be shut down until there isn’t a single hungry or homeless Canadian. Why are we taking care of folks from other countries when we cannot afford to take care of our own?

  8. CorgiSilver8194 on

    >It’s leaving this man and many other migrants stuck in limbo here

    Crazy idea. SEND THEM HOME!

  9. Wind_Best_1440 on

    Deport them, also we should tally up how much money they costed for the Canadian taxpayer and then levy those costs on their home nation. If their home nation doesn’t want to pay it then we put a full ban of travel from those countries until they pay.

  10. Wolfman-101 on

    Our own citizens are hungry, homeless, and can’t afford to have kids. We can’t be the world’s saviour anymore. Deport them.

  11. If they don’t like „limbo“ there are plenty of other countries to choose from!

    They shopped to get here didn’t they? In all cases there were countries along the way to get here.

  12. Odd-Foundation-4637 on

    Why on earth are they “stuck in limbo”- deport these people immediately.
    You’re not an “asylum seeker” if you came here on a student visa.. you’re not an “asylum seeker” if you came from a peaceful g20 country.. you’re not an asylum seeker because you committed crime while visiting Canada…

    Get rid of them and bill them for their services…we need an immediate public showing to get the message out to other would be abusers of the system.
    Pretty clear systemic abuse of the Canadian immigration system has gone on too long.

  13. Nearly 14,000 international students applied for asylum in 2024, a significant rise from previous years.

    In the first three months of 2025, 5,500 students filed asylum claims, representing a 22% increase over the same period in 2024

    In 2018, only 1,515 students made claims. The 2024 figures represent roughly a 600% increase over that period.

  14. MolokoPlus25 on

    How many of the asylum seekers are single young males? Would they not be useful in their countries of origin to rebuild or build cities/infrastructure, protect their families etc? I keep seeing lots of men in relation to this topic.

  15. ConsistentBattle5342 on

    Not Canada’s problem, we are well beyond full right now. I’d like to see 0 immigration for 5-10 years and sending many refugees back. 

  16. imaginary48 on

    > With uncertainty hanging over his refugee status in the U.S., Jean left behind his wife and their months-old baby in December to seek asylum in Canada.

    First line of the article. He ditched his own family in the US after making a refugee claim there. If the US is so unsafe and unstable or potentially going to deport him back to Haiti where they fled from, then why would he feel comfortable leaving his wife and baby behind to face the same persecution he claims to be escaping from? His refugee claim here in Canada is totally illegitimate and an example of country shopping.

  17. Winnipeg-Bear on

    Canada is an open and welcoming country, but there is so much crap going on right now, that we need to tighten our belts and improve things for the people already here. If someone is here on a temporary work/study visa then they have to go, that’s a job that could be open to a Canadian, if no one wants that job, then the company will have to pay more to fill the vacancy. If a person wants asylum, then it may sound heartless, but we can’t solve every problem for everyone who asks.

  18. No_Refrigerator8913 on

    Good. We have done more than enough. Let some other countries take them.

  19. GhostOfLegend on

    Wonder how many are actual claims compared to fraudulent claims.

    Pleaae correct me if I am wrong and/or misinformed however isn’t it true that a lot of *students from India* go for Asylum claims after the fact?

  20. Send every last one of them back! We can’t even take of the people already here or were born here.

  21. We have too many asylum seekers in the country already and we cant even take care of our own.

  22. Healthy_Yard_3862 on

    If your temporary status is ending is time for you to leave. We shouldnt accept these bogus asylum claims.

  23. PlumpHughJazz on

    Good.

    Hopefully this prevents them from importing their elderly parents and forcing us the baggage of caring for them whilst contributing nothing.

  24. emmadonelsense on

    These articles have dried up any empathy we may have had. Our kindness has been taken advantage of to the point that I really don’t give a hoot anymore. If you can’t be bothered to claim asylum the second you get here, then I don’t believe your “risk of persecution” and neither should our government.

  25. How hard is this to fix just declare every country safe unless there’s a legit war like Ukraine. I’m sorry but India is a safe country go to the police there …

  26. BigOlBearCanada on

    People aren’t economic numbers to prop up an economy.

    We are also not required to solve the world’s problems.

    Sure. Help people during time of war/crisis. Absolutely. Peace keepers all day. Help those we can.

    But. We can’t just endlessly help everyone and there is no end goal. Putting people into hotels and having them get stuck in the system with no clear plan isn’t a solution nor does it help anyone.

    If the original reason people fled resolves – then there is no further need for asylum.

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