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  1. #1
    over40's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Posts
    49

    How does Canada do it?

    Is anyone familar with how illegal immigration in Canada is going?

    Do they have a better system then we do? They must.......

    What happens to an illegal immigrant if they get caught in Canada?

    Anyone?????

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    I have heard that they are more than welcome to come to canada! The Illegals that is, isnt that crazy?

    Acidrain

  3. #3
    Senior Member
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    Good, if they do not wanna go back home, let them go to Canada.

  4. #4
    tms
    tms is offline

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    Canada doesn't like illegals either. They are having problems there too. Mainly it's a lot of people from all over Mexico included. They feel for us. I was listening to coast to coast am with Frosty and some canadian's were calling in about it. They have seen what having two languages can do to a country, french/english. Go to the website below notice. Well this could be the USA some day English/Spanish, we are already headed that way.

    they don't want illegals eithe, I have been there, close borders and keep them where they belong

    info you requested:

    http://www.irb-cisr.gc.ca/en/index_e.htm
    http://www.irb-cisr.gc.ca/en/about/trib ... acts_e.htm

    Admissibility Hearings
    and Detention Reviews
    The Immigration Division:

    Conducts admissibility hearings for people believed to be inadmissible to, or removable from, Canada.
    Reviews, at intervals established in the Act, the grounds for detention of people detained under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.
    Admissibility Hearings
    When does the ID decide to hold a hearing?
    The ID holds a hearing for someone only at the request of the Canada Border Service Agency (CBSA). A CBSA officer provides a report containing the reasons for which he/she believes that the person should not be admitted to, or allowed to stay in, Canada.

    For whom are hearings held?
    Foreign nationals or permanent residents believed to be in violation of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

    What are the grounds for inadmissibility to, or removal from, Canada?
    security grounds
    violating human rights
    serious criminality
    organized criminality
    health reasons
    financial reasons (unable to provide for oneself)
    misrepresentation
    failure to comply with the Act
    What happens after a hearing?
    Based on the evidence and the testimony of both parties (CBSA and the person concerned), the ID decides whether or not the allegations are founded.

    If it decides that the allegations are founded, the ID issues a removal order for the person concerned.
    If it decides that the allegations are not founded, the ID stops the hearing and the person concerned retains his/her status.
    Detention
    Who can be detained?
    A foreign national or permanent resident.

    What are the grounds for detention?
    The CBSA may want to detain a person who:

    is unlikely to appear for a hearing or removal,
    is a danger to the public or has violated human or international rights, or
    has not established her identity.
    Why does the ID review the grounds for detention?
    The ID reviews the grounds for detention to ensure that the person is not detained without sufficient reasons, and that the situation which led to the detention still exists.

    When does the ID review the grounds for detention?
    When a person is detained by the CBSA, the ID carries out a review:

    within 48 hours of the start of detention,
    then within 7 days of that first review.
    After that, the ID reviews the grounds for detention at least every 30 days.
    What happens then?
    Based on the evidence and the testimony of both parties (CBSA and the person concerned), the ID may:

    order the release of the person detained, with or without conditions, or
    maintain the detention.
    Some ID Figures Number of … Total
    Members at the ID:
    (ID members are public servants) ~ 30
    Admissibility hearings finalized in 2004: 2,140
    Detention reviews in 2004: 11,776
    "The defense of a nation begins at it's borders" Tancredo

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