Lifestyle World Canadian officials in Nigeria work with U.S. to stem asylum seekers By News Desk Posted on May 4, 2018 2 min read 0 0 2,566 Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Share on Reddit Share on Pinterest Share on Linkedin Share on Tumblr Canada has officials working with U.S. visa officers in Lagos, Nigeria, as Ottawa leans on its neighbor to stop issuing so many visas to Nigerians who then make refugee claims in Canada. The Canadian government is trying to stem the flow of asylum seekers illegally walking across the U.S. border even as their ranks grow: About 2,500 asylum seekers crossed into Canada to file refugee claims in April, according to estimates from the federal immigration and refugee department — the highest level since August and almost triple last April’s figure. More than 26,000 people illegally crossed the Canada-U.S. border in the past 15 months to file refugee claims. The Canadian government says many of the more recent arrivals are Nigerians who arrived bearing valid U.S. visas after having spent very little time in the United States. “It is apparent that they obtained those visas with the express intent to actually go to Canada. … We’ve been sharing that information with the United States with the view of preventing the abuse of U.S. visas,” a Canadian immigration department spokeswoman told Reuters in an email. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his ministers faced pointed questions this week after Reuters reported that Canada wants U.S. help turning back thousands of asylum seekers. A Canadian official familiar with the matter told Reuters that Canada wants to amend a bilateral agreement to allow it to block border-crossing refugee claimants.
Gluten-free foods contain more fat, sugar and are not a healthy substitute to regular products, experts say
Liberals win a minority government Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hung onto power after a tight election on Monday …
Health Gluten-free foods contain more fat, sugar and are not a healthy substitute to regular products, experts say