Key facts
- A legal challenge argues Canada's Safe Third Country Agreement forces asylum seekers into the US, risking deportation.
- The Canadian Council for Refugees and Amnesty International Canada are involved in the challenge.
- Critics claim 'safety valves' for humanitarian exemptions are not applied in practice by Canadian border officials.
- The Canadian government maintains the US meets the requirements to be a safe third country.
- A family's story of being sent back to the US and deported to Honduras is central to the legal challenge.
Critics contend that Canada's immigration policies, particularly the Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA), compel asylum seekers to enter the United States, where they face potential detention and deportation. This assertion is at the heart of a legal challenge brought forth by the Canadian Council for Refugees, Amnesty International Canada, and three Honduran asylum seekers.
The family's harrowing experience, involving a difficult choice at the Canadian border and subsequent deportation to Honduras, illustrates the concerns raised by advocacy groups. They argue that Canadian border officials are not adequately upholding court-ordered safeguards before returning individuals to the US under the STCA. The agreement, established in 2004, mandates that asylum claims be made in the country of first arrival, initially applying to land-based crossings.
Legal experts and advocacy organizations increasingly question the safety of the US as a third country, citing its practices of detaining refugees and the risk of returning them to potentially dangerous home countries. Simultaneously, Canada has been implementing stricter asylum system rules, which critics have likened to "Trump-style" immigration policies.
While Canada's top court upheld the constitutionality of the STCA in 2023, it also acknowledged the existence of 'safety valves' for humanitarian exemptions. However, advocacy groups assert these exemptions are largely theoretical, pointing to the growing number of asylum seekers being sent to US detention facilities. They claim that individuals are often not informed of their right to seek an exemption or provide evidence, and must make life-altering decisions rapidly, often without legal counsel.
Canada's border agency stated that officers have limited discretion for removals in exceptional cases, requiring clear evidence of a threat to life or inhumane treatment if returned to the US. The federal government, however, defends the US's compliance with the STCA. The allegations made by the claimants are yet to be tested in court.