I'll start, and then Zena will add to it.
Over the past almost two years, we've begun to see that the Syrian newcomers who have come in are younger parents. They are parents who are 15-year-olds or 16-year-olds who have two or three children. They may not have been with the file of their parents, and yet their parents are here. As our colleagues in Vancouver said, kinship is very important. It then becomes very difficult for the parents to sponsor their 16-year-old daughter who has a husband—who may be 18—and three kids. That's a family unit in Canada.
That is why, when we started this presentation, I said that maybe Canada needs to look at the concept of family, because that is their daughter, and those are their grandchildren, yet because she is deemed to be married, he is a separate file. It becomes very difficult.
That is not the only case we've seen with this. We have a client who is also Syrian, and she didn't come with this last wave of newcomers. She has been here for a while, almost three years. Her two children were able to escape from Syria and are now in Turkey. One of them is 23, and the other is 17. She cannot bring them. She has been having such a horrible time trying to bring her children, only because she has remarried. These are the laws in Canada here. She has remarried another man and not their father. Their father is still in Syria. The 17-year-old is deemed a minor and will need to go back to Syria or get some documentation from his father in Syria—whom he can't get a hold of because they don't know whether he is alive—to be able to be sponsored.
His older sister is 23, so her mother cannot sponsor her. She is in Turkey, looking after her younger brother, and the mother is in our office in tears. Those are the cases that we see, not only from Syria but from all over the Middle East.