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Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, yesterday, the government announced measures to expedite the processing of Ukrainian refugees. That responds in part to the Bloc Québécois's demands, but there is an elephant in the room. The most important element is missing, and that would be the planes. Even tho

March 30th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, that is a partial answer to an administrative problem. It is not an answer to the human problem. There are families who need to get out. They have fled the war, but not everyone can afford three or four plane tickets. Hearing that their file has been processed is no

March 30th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, the Liberals are the only ones saying that this is going well. At some point, a reality check is needed. The government is failing. It does not currently have the resources in eastern Europe to look after refugees from Ukraine. However, it does have the resources he

March 29th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, the Canada-Ukraine authorization for emergency travel is a failure that is slowing the arrival of Ukrainian refugees in Quebec and Canada. The government needs to arrange to airlift them out and deal with the paperwork once they are safely here. The government can en

March 29th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, that is not good enough for us, and it is not good enough for Ukrainians. This is day 34 of the war, and we cannot spend any more time getting bogged down in the paperwork. Border services officers can deal with that once Ukrainian families are here. They are already

March 29th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Committees of the House  Madam Speaker, I thank my colleague from Sherwood Park—Fort Saskatchewan for his excellent speech. He will surely remember that the minister said that it would take 12 weeks before IRCC could lift the visa requirement and adapt its computer system. What does that say about that

March 29th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, on Wednesday, the Prime Minister said before the European Parliament that we cannot abandon Ukraine. However, today, Radio‑Canada confirmed that his government is abandoning Ukrainians. He is plunging them into endless administrative chaos, which is preventing them

March 28th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, how can it be that, after 33 days of war, there is just one centre in Poland, yes, one, where refugees can give their biometrics? How can it be that, after 33 days, all refugees can do is refresh a website that keeps crashing in the hopes of snagging an almost-imposs

March 28th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, that is not reassuring in the least. Three weeks ago, the Bloc Québécois asked the government to do better. The situation has evolved since then. The minister's plan to welcome Ukrainian refugees is, by all accounts, a failure. It has gotten to the point that people

March 28th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Foreign Affairs  Mr. Speaker, as we speak, more than half the children in Ukraine have fled the war. In all, 4.3 million children have left their homes. They are either elsewhere in Ukraine, hoping the Russian troops will not catch up with them, or they are in refugee camps. Today we do not want

March 24th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Foreign Affairs  Mr. Speaker, the government's refusal to airlift people out is problematic in two ways. On the European side, millions of refugees are stuck in camps because there is no room for them on planes or because they simply cannot afford flights. On our side, in Montreal alone, 40 tonn

March 24th, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, that answer is no longer acceptable. Although we are used to hearing hollow answers from the minister in the House, hollow answers are unacceptable to the Ukrainian women and children trapped in Poland without a penny to their names. The minister has no right to tel

March 23rd, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, for nearly four weeks, the Bloc Québécois has been co-operating with the government to help welcome Ukrainian refugees, but now we are fed up. It is unacceptable that the minister still has not chartered any flights to bring refugee families here. Air Transat has vo

March 23rd, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, the minister knows he can count on us to co-operate, but we need to see some action. People do not understand why no air operations have begun with chartered flights to bring refugees to Canada. Air Transat has even indicated that it is willing to take part if the go

March 22nd, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship  Mr. Speaker, the Bloc Québécois supports some of the government's efforts to facilitate the intake of refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine. Now that the minister has invited all these families to come here, he has no right to let them languish in refugee camps for weeks or even mo

March 22nd, 2022House debate

Alexis Brunelle-DuceppeBloc