Berliner Boersenzeitung - From Colombia or Haiti, migrants' long road ends in Canada

EUR -
AED 4.029695
AFN 75.570429
ALL 98.785979
AMD 426.825834
ANG 1.98762
AOA 1012.637963
ARS 1071.596221
AUD 1.612152
AWG 1.97481
AZN 1.866137
BAM 1.955918
BBD 2.226735
BDT 131.787977
BGN 1.955169
BHD 0.415957
BIF 3199.841585
BMD 1.097116
BND 1.431571
BOB 7.620461
BRL 5.985647
BSD 1.102867
BTN 92.540601
BWP 14.587883
BYN 3.609118
BYR 21503.481526
BZD 2.222935
CAD 1.490071
CDF 3149.821503
CHF 0.941183
CLF 0.036753
CLP 1014.119255
CNY 7.700109
CNH 7.781221
COP 4569.73119
CRC 572.071126
CUC 1.097116
CUP 29.073585
CVE 110.271674
CZK 25.34013
DJF 196.381886
DKK 7.455543
DOP 66.328247
DZD 146.458212
EGP 53.05227
ERN 16.456746
ETB 131.940003
FJD 2.427315
FKP 0.835519
GBP 0.835778
GEL 3.006379
GGP 0.835519
GHS 17.447056
GIP 0.835519
GMD 75.70134
GNF 9522.314099
GTQ 8.533517
GYD 230.723965
HKD 8.519795
HNL 27.42266
HRK 7.459307
HTG 145.417417
HUF 401.183104
IDR 17213.482105
ILS 4.17732
IMP 0.835519
INR 92.130899
IQD 1444.687442
IRR 46194.086184
ISK 148.889535
JEP 0.835519
JMD 174.260547
JOD 0.777312
JPY 163.077024
KES 142.274109
KGS 92.926223
KHR 4476.536166
KMF 492.550764
KPW 987.404142
KRW 1479.576652
KWD 0.33608
KYD 0.919056
KZT 532.612237
LAK 24352.473964
LBP 98758.377476
LKR 323.899604
LRD 212.858405
LSL 19.267066
LTL 3.239499
LVL 0.663635
LYD 5.259318
MAD 10.787153
MDL 19.349171
MGA 5051.305737
MKD 61.62373
MMK 3563.391285
MNT 3728.001493
MOP 8.819134
MRU 43.664026
MUR 51.004877
MVR 16.840978
MWK 1912.315745
MXN 21.148158
MYR 4.690197
MZN 70.097679
NAD 19.267066
NGN 1818.864936
NIO 40.585601
NOK 11.700636
NPR 148.072385
NZD 1.779502
OMR 0.422586
PAB 1.102867
PEN 4.108249
PGK 4.392606
PHP 62.193363
PKR 306.035123
PLN 4.317427
PYG 8596.520315
QAR 4.021043
RON 4.979266
RSD 116.98113
RUB 104.977648
RWF 1494.190438
SAR 4.121318
SBD 9.082712
SCR 16.467434
SDG 659.925538
SEK 11.377684
SGD 1.430648
SHP 0.835519
SLE 25.066151
SLL 23005.9768
SOS 630.238146
SRD 34.234032
STD 22708.094501
SVC 9.649584
SYP 2756.537809
SZL 19.259166
THB 36.693069
TJS 11.745967
TMT 3.850879
TND 3.373604
TOP 2.569559
TRY 37.60683
TTD 7.479453
TWD 35.380362
TZS 2984.156341
UAH 45.403448
UGX 4044.244783
USD 1.097116
UYU 46.126155
UZS 14050.850446
VEF 3974361.811206
VES 40.581491
VND 27252.371484
VUV 130.251864
WST 3.069142
XAF 655.996705
XAG 0.034192
XAU 0.000415
XCD 2.965012
XDR 0.82015
XOF 655.996705
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.611246
ZAR 19.159547
ZMK 9875.360096
ZMW 29.031757
ZWL 353.271035
  • BCC

    0.6100

    138.9

    +0.44%

  • SCS

    0.3500

    12.97

    +2.7%

  • NGG

    -0.4700

    66.5

    -0.71%

  • RBGPF

    58.9400

    58.94

    +100%

  • RELX

    -0.3200

    46.29

    -0.69%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    9.66

    -0.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    6.98

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0770

    24.813

    -0.31%

  • RIO

    -0.1300

    69.7

    -0.19%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.7

    -0.16%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    77.47

    -0.59%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.28

    -0.15%

  • BCE

    -0.1300

    33.71

    -0.39%

  • GSK

    0.4500

    38.82

    +1.16%

  • BTI

    0.1800

    35.29

    +0.51%

  • BP

    0.4200

    32.88

    +1.28%

From Colombia or Haiti, migrants' long road ends in Canada
From Colombia or Haiti, migrants' long road ends in Canada / Photo: Sebastien ST-JEAN - AFP

From Colombia or Haiti, migrants' long road ends in Canada

For exhausted migrants, a small stretch of snow-covered road is the last step in a long journey to a new life in Canada. Some drag heavy suitcases, others carry all their worldly belongings in small plastic bags.

Text size:

In a hurry to get into their new country, Haitians, Venezuelans, Colombians and Turks hasten their pace as they step out of a car with their heads down to finally cross the last border of their journey: one separating Canada and the United States, between New York state and Montreal.

"Stop! Passing here is illegal, if you do you will be arrested," a Canadian police officer repeats to migrants who arrive in clusters throughout the day and night at what is known as the Roxham Road crossing point.

Among the latest ones to arrive under a heavy snowfall, some don't have winter coats or boots, only light clothes and sneakers. Mothers carrying children or stuffed animals struggle to push strollers through the deep snow.

Only the children are smiling, looking fascinated to see snow for the first time.

A small backpack flung over his shoulder, Makenzy Dorgeville says he is very happy to have finally arrived in Canada after fleeing violence in Haiti and spending years on the road. He describes his trip as an obstacle course, listing 10 countries he crossed in South and Central America to eventually get here.

The 40-year-old with a slight build knows that even if his asylum bid is rejected, Canada does not deport Haitians.

As they cross the border, NGO volunteers give migrants coats, gloves and hats as well as words of encouragement. "We just want them to know that there's people who support the journey that they're going through in their search to find a place to live in safety," says Bridges Not Borders volunteer Frances Ravensbergen.

After being checked and registered by police, the migrants are taken to the nearest official border post to file an asylum claim -- between 50 and 60 percent of applications are approved.

- Growing insecurity -

After a few months, generally they obtain a work permit and children go to school. Migrants become eligible for health care and other social benefits and are put up in refugee centers or hotels paid for by the government while their application is being processed.

Since pandemic restrictions were lifted and the borders reopened, migratory flows have intensified all over the world.

Roxham Road is now a known crossing point and social media are full of videos explaining how to get there, how much it costs to get from the nearest bus station in Plattsburgh, New York to the border.

In 2022, nearly 40,000 people arrived in Canada by this route, twice as many as in 2017, which was the previous record year, according to Canadian immigration data. And they've been undeterred even by the bone-chilling cold of Canadian winters, with more than 5,000 arriving in January alone.

This irregular migration is somewhat new for Canada, which is difficult to reach due to its relative geographic isolation and very strict visa policy.

"It is, among other things, the speed of the system in Canada that attracts people here, compared to the United States. On the American side, it can take five to six years or more compared to about two years in Canada," explains Stephanie Valois, president of the Quebec Association of Immigration Lawyers, referring to how long it takes to process an asylum request.

Calls are growing to close Roxham Road, but she notes that to "seek safety people are ready for anything" and that Canada has a responsibility. "Asylum seekers cross the Darien, so it's not the border that will stop them," she says.

That notorious patch of jungle between Colombia and Panama "is very difficult physically with mountains, lots of mud, and then criminal groups who arrest migrants and rob them," she says.

"The people who have been through there are left shaken. My clients tell me horror stories, the women have been raped, the men beaten, they have lost everything and many die," says the lawyer, who has dedicated her life to defending asylum seekers.

- 'If you fall, you're going to die' -

That part of the trip remains traumatizing for Eli, a Haitian migrant who recently arrived and spoke with AFP in Montreal (at her request AFP is not using her real name).

"The jungle is the worst," confides the young woman with long braids and large hoop earrings, who rarely loses her smile. "I saw a lot of bodies, dead people on the road. One night, we had to sleep next to corpses," continued the 29-year-old woman who came to Canada with her two-year-old daughter.

The narrow road, the cliffs, the wild animals, "you know that if you fall, you're going to die," she adds.

The influx of asylum seekers, particularly via Roxham Road, is expected to be a topic of discussion between President Joe Biden and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during the American leader's March 23-34 visit to Ottawa.

In Canada, which is unaccustomed to this type of talk, anti-migrant rhetoric is growing.

More and more voices are calling for the renegotiation of a Canada-US treaty which stipulates that migrants who wish to apply for asylum must do so in the first country in which they land after leaving home.

(T.Renner--BBZ)