Advertisement

Keep a 'wary eye' on U.S. travel visas, Goodale tells American counterpart

Canadian border guards appear at a Canada-U.S. border crossing in Surrey, B.C. Photo from CP

Canada's Public Safety Minister has told his American counterpart to keep a "wary eye" on the travel visas it issues to the United States.

In an interview Sunday with CBC News, Goodale said Canadian officials have identified trends where documents issued from certain U.S. embassies and consulates are being misused.

"We have asked them to go back upstream and examine the pattern of these travel documents being issued and how come the people to whom they were issued appear to have had no intention of staying in the United States, but were simply using the documents as vehicles to get into the United States and then make a beeline for the Canadian border," Goodale explained.

While the minister refused to identify diplomatic missions that have been problematic, Nigeria is one place where people obtained visas to visit the U.S. with the intention of heading to Canada.

The minister said acting Secretary of Homeland Security Elaine Duke was very receptive to the suggestion and indicated the U.S. is also looking at putting up signs at irregular crossings on its side of the border with messages to dissuade those seeking asylum in Canada.

"They're examining what they can do to communicate," Goodale said.

In a news release today about the meeting at the G7 summit of interior ministers in Ischia, Italy, the department of homeland security reported Duke and Goodale talked about "joint steps to take to address illegal migration across their shared border."

Goodale said he asked Duke to consider alerting Canadian authorities when the U.S. is about to make policy decisions that would affect the border, in order to give agencies such as border services time to prepare.

This summer, thousands of Haitians streamed into Quebec at an illegal border crossing after the United States announced it would not extend temporary protected status for Haitians who have lived in that country since the devastating 2010 earthquake.

Goodale said G7 ministers also spent a lot of time talking about fighting extremism of all kinds, and how to prepare for the return of citizens who have been fighting in Syria and Iraq.

"What happens to the foreign fighters, the people who have come from various Western countries to the fight in Syria and Iraq, and now if the battlefield activity is winding down, where do they go and what do they do", he said.

Security agencies around the world will have to identify and track those people, Goodale said, and determine the risk they pose as well as preserve evidence of any battlefield crimes before figuring out if and how they could be prosecuted in the future.