Groups fear visa problems ahead of COP15

With days to go before a major international summit next month in Montreal, human rights advocates, blaming the federal immigration department for racist policies, fear a possible repeat of the problems that had prevented certain African delegates to attend a summit last summer in the Quebec metropolis.

The Ministry of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship (MIRC) claims to have found no flaws in the processing of visa applications for the International AIDS Society conference in July. Still, a number of delegates from Africa were denied visas or were still waiting for a response before the conference began.

“The whole system is designed to exclude people,” says Madhukar Pai, Canada Research Chair in Translational Epidemiology and Global Health at McGill University in Montreal.

Next month, Montreal will host a UN conference, COP15 on biodiversity, but delegates from regions most affected by species decline fear they will have to stay stuck at home.

“There is something about our system of government that is, what I call anti-Africa or anti-black people, and that worries me a lot,” Mr Pai said.

For years, he attended conferences where his African colleagues had more difficulty obtaining visas than his Latin American and Asian peers.

It’s a problem he’s seen at events in the United States, Britain and Canada, and one that particularly concerned him this spring when Ottawa is struggling to process many applications, refugee status when renewing passports.

“I don’t know if the government really learned much from the AIDS conference fiasco,” says Mr. Pai. The anger was so palpable, to have all those empty seats of missing African delegates. I am concerned about any international conference that will be held in any part of Canada these days. »

The ministry does not share this concern.

“The MIRC is using all available tools to quickly facilitate the review of several thousand visa applications,” spokesman Jeffrey MacDonald wrote.

The department says it has created an extraordinary events unit that works with organizers to ensure that Canadian diplomatic representations abroad have a list of registrants. People can use a specific code when they make their request which then takes priority.

“The MIRC works closely with the Canada Border Services Agency and event organizers to ensure the application process and requirements are well understood. This ensures visa applications are reviewed in a timely manner so participants can easily enter the country,” MacDonald added.

The ministry suggests that guests at the AIDS conference may have botched their visa applications.

“Waiting too long or omitting event code can cause a delay in the process. There are always compelling reasons to deny certain individuals entry into the country,” MacDonald said.

Lauren Dobson-Hughes, a health and gender expert, says Canada and other Western countries need to recognize a much larger problem.

“It’s a systemic problem across the globe. We tend to be divided into two groups: the donors from the north who are often the hosts of these conferences and the people from the south who suffer from the problems. But the conferences are about them, they are organized without them. »

Ms. Dobson-Hughes recalls summits in 2016 and 2019 where African delegates were unable to obtain visas despite receiving an official invitation from the Canadian government.

“I don’t think officials at Global Affairs Canada are particularly happy to see their own government denying visas to some of their African colleagues with whom they have established a good relationship. »

She hopes that the next Canadian strategy on Africa, which the parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Robert Oliphant, will present next year, will include a section on visas.

“There are technical solutions, but these will only be effective if we deal with the underlying problem, namely biased and racist attitudes,” says Ms. Dobson-Hughes.

In 2018, the Globe and Mail revealed that Canada had refused a majority of visa applications from a dozen African countries.

But because of the reduced Canadian diplomatic presence on the continent, the process can be complicated: people often have to travel several thousand kilometers or cross borders to transmit their documents and have their fingerprints taken.

Isseu Diallo, who heads a Senegalese association of people living with AIDS, delivered a virtual conference during the AIDS summit presented in Montreal. She was invited to participate in person. However, she backed out of applying when she found that several other guests had been denied visas.

“It’s the Canadian government’s fault. A summit like this is to bring people together. People have to come and organize seminars and take part in workshops,” she stresses.

Ms. Diallo wonders if the Canadian authorities did not want the too large gatherings during the pandemic of COVID. “Maybe it’s not about racism, maybe the government got too many requests. »

“I was a little discouraged, but I told myself that I would come to Montreal another day. »

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