Hundreds more Afghan refugees arrive in Canada, including human rights defenders - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:21 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Hundreds more Afghan refugees arrive in Canada, including human rights defenders

The federal government announced on Tuesday the arrival of more than 250 Afghan refugees, most of them classified by Ottawa as human rights defenders.

Canada has pledged to resettle up to 250 refugees annually who qualify as human rights defenders

People attempting to flee the Taliban climb on a plane at the Kabul airport on August 16, 2021. (Wakil Kohsar/AFP/Getty Images)

The federal government announced on Tuesday the arrival of more than 250 Afghan refugees.

The refugees most of whom are described as human rights defenders by the federal government are the latestto arrive in Canada since the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban last year.

A charter flight carrying the refugeesarrived in Calgaryfrom Islamabad, Pakistan.

"It is a privilege to welcome today this cohort of Afghan refugees, who face persecution as a result of their work to protect the human rights of others," said Immigration Minister Sean Fraser in a media statement.

"I am grateful for their work to document and prevent human rights abuses and proud that they now call our country home."

Ottawa says about 6,750 Afghan nationals have been resettled in Canada since the Taliban took over. They include Afghans who assisted the Canadian military during its mission in Afghanistan.

The refugees also include Afghans deemed vulnerable, such as women leaders, members ofreligious and ethnic minorities, LGBTQ individuals and journalists.

The group of 252refugeesincludes 170 people considered human rights defenders by the government.

The remaining 82 are people whose employment involved a "significant and/or enduring relationship with the Government of Canada, and their families," the government said in a news release.

Those individuals, who are judged by Ottawa to have contributed to the protection and promotion of human rights and freedoms, are eligible to apply for resettlement in Canada as part of a new dedicated stream.

The government has pledged to resettle up to 250 human rights defenders per year from around the world.