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Citizenship and Immigration committee  To me, the part about not granting them entry is pretty cut and dried: when they've been accused of something that could have a 10-year sentence in Canada. Removing them is perhaps a little more complicated because they're already here. In general, if someone has been charged w

November 5th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  One of the means used particularly by refugee claimants to extend their stay here is to stay as long as they can with as many appeals as possible. They’re likely to have stronger grounds for a humanitarian and compassionate case the longer they stay here. They may marry a Canadia

November 5th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Are you talking about people who are refused entry, or are you talking about people who could be deported?

November 5th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Rather than those who are refused entry. I wasn't clear on which aspect. They've been charged with a sentence of—

November 5th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  It would have to be a charge that would, I believe, get 10 years in Canada. Although it's a charge overseas, it would have to be something quite serious in Canada for them to be subject to that. Am I correct in that, or the law?

November 5th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Yes, it would have to be a pretty serious action. If someone is sentenced to 10 years in some country for something they wouldn't be charged with in Canada, then that issue wouldn't arise. If someone committed a crime in another country for which they would get a 10-year sentenc

November 5th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Thank you, Chair. I'm going to comment on two aspects of the bill that have attracted a lot of attention. One is the provision that gives the minister the authority to use negative discretion on who may enter the country, and the other is the accelerated removal of individuals c

November 5th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Yes. The U.S. has been working on this for some time. There are technical problems, and there are funding problems, so they haven't got their entry and exit systems fully in operation yet. As far as I know, they are very valuable tools. They are catching people who shouldn't be t

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  I think the biometric checks, both when people come in and leave, are very important. It certainly doesn't stand by itself. That doesn't automatically give you a security check. If someone comes in, it may come up on the computer that he is a security threat, that he is entering

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  The biometric the government is trying to use involves having people give biometric fingerprints and digital facial images overseas, so we can confirm when they arrive at the port of entry that they're the same person we gave the visa to. What I was recommending, though, is that

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  In some cases, people deliberately use several names, especially criminals, or security, or spies. That's another kind of problem. The first one you mentioned was really whether to decide which transliteration you use in English, where several might be in use. China now, by the w

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Well, certainly the Auditor General identified quite a swath of them in terms of what we're not able to do thoroughly enough with regard to coordination among the four key agencies. I could list about ten of them, and I think they all sound pretty valid. Again, they are some of t

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  When you talk about the system that exists now, are you referring to the NEXUS cards, Mr. Weston, or are you talking about the biometric screening that's planned for implementation in the next year?

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Well, that can be a problem. I lived in Syria, and Arabic names are sometimes transcribed with different vowels, in particular, because Arabic vowels fall somewhere in between English vowels and vice versa. So yes, in that sense, that could be an issue. If you simply don't identi

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott