Evidence of meeting #8 for Citizenship and Immigration in the 39th Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was china.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Maxwell Vo  President, SOS Viet Phi
Hoi Trinh  Attorney, VCA (Vietnamese Community in Australia), SOS Viet Phi
Patrick Nguyen  As an Individual
Mai Nguyen  Volunteer, VCA Office in Manila, Philippines, SOS Viet Phi
Richard Mahoney  Legal Counsel and Advisor, SOS Viet Phi
Joel Chipkar  Spokesperson, Toronto, Falun Dafa Association of Canada
David Matas  Lawyer, Immigration and Human Rights, David Matas Barrister & Solicitor, Falun Dafa Association of Canada
Lizhi He  Falun Gong practitioner, Falun Dafa Association of Canada
Xun  Shawn) Li (President, Falun Dafa Association of Canada

4:10 p.m.

Legal Counsel and Advisor, SOS Viet Phi

Richard Mahoney

I don't know exactly, but it was very quickly.

I think there is no question that the ministerial discretion in subsection 25(1) would probably be the fastest because the minister can issue a minister's permit as quickly as he chooses. There may be processes and checks and so forth that have to be gone through, but a minister's permit--as honourable members well know--can be done very quickly.

4:10 p.m.

Liberal

Borys Wrzesnewskyj Liberal Etobicoke Centre, ON

Thank you.

4:10 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Norman Doyle

Thank you.

You can use your minute and a half or two minutes however you want to. If you want to go to Blair...or I can come back after I go--

4:10 p.m.

Liberal

Borys Wrzesnewskyj Liberal Etobicoke Centre, ON

After showing that cross-party goodwill, I'm more than happy to pass it on.

4:10 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Norman Doyle

Who would I go to now, Mr. Clerk?

Madam Faille.

4:10 p.m.

Bloc

Meili Faille Bloc Vaudreuil—Soulanges, QC

I'd like to continue along the same lines as Borys. The will of the committee is that these persons be recognized as refugees. The committee had unanimously endorsed a motion to that effect. I don't see a problem with our drafting and tabling a motion that could be debated next week. We could hear from individuals like Rick Herringer and Charles Godfrey. I don't see in the material the letter from Rick Herringer who was the official in Manila at the time. However, there is no reason why the committee can't hear from these officials. As you pointed out, the minister can exercise his discretionary authority and issue a ministerial permit.

I don't think anyone here would hold it against the minister for issuing 188 permits to persons seeking refugee status. Mention was made of delays they encountered and of the overall time it took for them to make their way to this country. We know of two cases where the applications had already been processed and it still took at least a year.

Perhaps I could table a detailed motion reiterating the will of the committee to see ministerial permits issued to these individuals. This would give the minister, or a departmental official, an opportunity to come here and explain why the provisions of section 25 could not be invoked.

4:15 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Norman Doyle

Also, tell me a little about the 200 people who are in the Philippines right now. Have they been integrated, both economically and socially into the Philippine community? Is that a problem for Canada if they have been integrated, in terms of resettlement?

4:15 p.m.

Attorney, VCA (Vietnamese Community in Australia), SOS Viet Phi

Hoi Trinh

To answer your question, I ask you to please go to the very first page of part 2, page 4, from the Bureau of Immigration of the Philippines. Paragraph 2 very clearly says the following:

The consistent policy of the Philippine Government is to repatriate said RVNs (the returning Vietnamese) to Vietnam, or resettle them to a third country willing to accept them. The Philippines has never been, and is not, a resettlement country. It also has no intention of socially integrating persons whose applications for asylum/refugee status it denied in the first place.

They've always maintained that. And the following letters, signed in 2003-04 from the House of Representatives and the Philippines Senate, confirmed that they have no durable solution for these people.

4:15 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Norman Doyle

So has the UNHCR been asked to more or less determine again if these people should be moved because they've...? Has the UNHCR almost abandoned this particular issue right now?

4:15 p.m.

Attorney, VCA (Vietnamese Community in Australia), SOS Viet Phi

Hoi Trinh

Yes, they have. They closed the camp down in 1996 at the end of the CPA. They closed all the camps down, and they left these people to fend for themselves. Since 1996, I have approached UNHCR in Manila many times asking them to at least confirm that at the time, 2,005 people were left without a durable solution. They would not do that until I went to Geneva in 2002 to get that confirmation. In fact, I presented the documentation last year.

UNHCR has consistently said that they are only looking after refugees. They don't look after any others. The letter I got from UNHCR simply said that if the resettlement countries can take them, that's great, but UNHCR cannot take them.

4:15 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Norman Doyle

Thank you.

Ed and Mario, go ahead, please.

4:15 p.m.

Conservative

Ed Komarnicki Conservative Souris—Moose Mountain, SK

I'd like to go back to the question I posed earlier; it's twofold. The first part was specifically about the relaxing of the definition, including the financial part of it. The second concerned applications made to, say, the United States, and whether there was a decline in them for some reason. I've got a few more questions. If you can give me a brief answer to the first two, we'll come back for a couple more.

4:15 p.m.

Legal Counsel and Advisor, SOS Viet Phi

Richard Mahoney

On the first question of whether they could be further relaxed, the honest answer is yes. It may be cumbersome; it may not achieve what this committee has set out to achieve in its previous motions, but we could all, I think, think of an amendment right now that would, for example, allow Philip to sponsor his father in this particular case. That would be one change. It may not address many of the others. It may not allow us to take the 200 that we as a country originally asked to take. Not knowing all the facts and all the connections and all the potential sponsorees that are there and what connections they have to relatives here, I can't expound on, but that's just one example that comes to me today.

I am not aware of--and I don't know if anyone else is--whether any of these remaining 188 have applied to other countries.

4:15 p.m.

Attorney, VCA (Vietnamese Community in Australia), SOS Viet Phi

Hoi Trinh

They have not applied because the other countries, just like Canada, have not been willing to take them.

Patrick's father has not applied to Canada because Canada has already said, “No, he won't be considered.”

4:15 p.m.

Conservative

Ed Komarnicki Conservative Souris—Moose Mountain, SK

Going back to the country of asylum class that you spoke of earlier, you said there was no possibility of a durable solution. My understanding was that there was some legislation in the Philippines to regularize the 188 who are there in that class. Is that a fact? Is there legislation under way to integrate them? I understand many have married Philippine people and have had children with them. They've been there for a long time. They've almost integrated already, but haven't been regularized, or there's been no provision for them. Is there legislation in the offing as we speak, to deal with that number?

4:15 p.m.

Attorney, VCA (Vietnamese Community in Australia), SOS Viet Phi

Hoi Trinh

No, there isn't. In fact, a number of bills have been tabled, and the community has been asking the Philippines to please grant them permanent residency, but we have never been successful. If you go to page 5 of the submission, right after the letter from the Bureau of Immigration there is a letter from the House of Representatives to the U.S. in 2003. In paragraph 3 it says, among other things, “For those Vietnamese who have been stateless for 13 years...”.

The bill has never passed second reading in the House of Representatives. They need to pass a special law, and as you can understand, it takes a long time to pass a law. It usually takes about nine years, as the House of Representatives has indicated, in the Philippines because the political situation is always volatile. There was one time when we had the bill up to second reading of the House, but then President Estrada was kicked out of office. We had another bill in the House when President Arroyo was in office, and he was faced with a coup. Then we had an election and a new committee came in.

So right now there is no bill allowing for the Vietnamese to become permanent residents. In fact, that's why they have been stateless for 17 years. Had someone tried hard enough, the situation wouldn't have lasted until now. We have tried our best in the Philippines, but to the best of my knowledge, it's easier for the resettlement countries--Australia and the U.S.--to change their policies than for the Philippines to pass its laws.

4:20 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Norman Doyle

You have a minute left, or I can go to Mario.

4:20 p.m.

Liberal

Mario Silva Liberal Davenport, ON

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I'm not a member of the committee, but I'm glad I'm here today, because this is certainly an incredible tragedy. We have heard so much about this over the years and have felt greatly for the people. They have gone through so much and been abandoned, in some ways, by UNHCR. The CIC based a lot of their decisions on information that came from the UN. That has unfortunately left a lot of people stateless. There's no question about that. They are in a very vulnerable situation and in need of international protection.

I gather from all the arguments that were made--and I believe there is also consensus between all parties--that we do want to have a resolution to deal with this terrible humanitarian situation. But maybe the best and fastest way, as was mentioned by Mr. Mahoney, is for the minister to use ministerial discretion and grant these people the right to come to Canada.

Would it be helpful if we had a resolution, endorsed unanimously by the committee, to ask the minister to expedite this as soon as possible?

4:20 p.m.

President, SOS Viet Phi

Maxwell Vo

It would be great if you could do that.

4:20 p.m.

Attorney, VCA (Vietnamese Community in Australia), SOS Viet Phi

Hoi Trinh

Right now our community is trying to ask the committee to think of the best way to help reunite families and find a doable solution. We come from Ottawa, Montreal, Vancouver--organizations and religious organizations. We met with you many times individually last year and at the committee. There's also a willingness in the community to offer private sponsorship under the country of asylum class.

Finally, could you please inform the minister of your willingness to agree with him or recommend to him that the people be recognized as refugees--whatever is the best way to reunite families, for Patrick to see his father, whatever you think is best? The power is in your hands.

4:20 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Norman Doyle

Mario, if you're finished I can move to Bill for a question.

Go ahead, Bill.

4:20 p.m.

NDP

Bill Siksay NDP Burnaby—Douglas, BC

Thanks, Chair.

Is there anything that characterizes these 118 people? Is there anything particularly problematic because they're the last of the 2,000 people? Is there anything that Canada needs to be concerned about, given their circumstances and the fact that they're the last remaining folks there?

4:20 p.m.

Attorney, VCA (Vietnamese Community in Australia), SOS Viet Phi

Hoi Trinh

No, and that's the most unfortunate thing. They have never been considered, so they have never been denied. It's not as if they were interviewed by the U.S. or Australia or Norway and then rejected because of their medical condition or a criminal background. They've never been considered. They've never even been interviewed.

He was denied simply because his father was not eligible to apply under the expanded policy announced by the former minister. He couldn't go to Australia because Australia didn't want to consider his case. In fact, we didn't even make a submission for his father to go to Australia because we knew that Australia could only take a limited number of people.

So no. In fact, the community is asking Canada to consider this group in the same way as any other refugee group. They will have to undergo medical tests, like others, and they will have to undergo criminal tests, like others. If they're clear, then they're good to go; if they're not clear, then they're not good to go.

The community is also willing to raise funds to cover part of the transportation and resettlement costs. In fact, the community and I raised over $90,000 last year to help those refugees go to the U.S. Because they couldn't go to Canada, we helped them go to the U.S. Mai has also gone to the Philippines, as have others, to help in the processing of those cases.

4:25 p.m.

NDP

Bill Siksay NDP Burnaby—Douglas, BC

Hoi, I wonder if you and Mai could describe the actual daily living conditions in a bit more detail. Mai, you alluded to it with a sort of list of general circumstances, but could you expand on that so people get a real sense of the difficulties they face in daily living in the Philippines?

4:25 p.m.

Volunteer, VCA Office in Manila, Philippines, SOS Viet Phi

Mai Nguyen

One story that really hits close to home, because I'm a student myself, is with a stateless Vietnamese man who was 22 years of age. I became friends with him. His name was Le Huy. He was admitted to university on compassionate grounds. His professor let him into university, but after his professor retired, the university found out that he did not have citizenship and was stateless. They kicked him out of school. They had posters of his face all over the school and he was not allowed on the grounds. He was treated almost like a criminal because he was trying to get an education. Through no fault of his own, being stateless, he was unable to do that. I've taken my education for granted and that's a story that has really hit hard.