Ottawa imports drug dealers and taxpayers pay the price

One mayor invoices Ottawa monthly, without success


Diane Francis
Financial Post

Vancouver's personable mayor, Philip Owen, says the cost to city taxpayers
as a result of Ottawa's immigration and refugee policies is "staggering."
And he aims to quantify just how expensive the influx of foreigners is for
taxpayers.

His remarks, made in a recent interview, follow comments made by
Mississauga, Ont., Mayor Hazel McCallion, who was jumped all over by special
interest groups. She pointed out that Ottawa's immigration and refugee
policies have let in many undesirables and deadbeats and have become a
costly burden for the education and health-care systems.

Her city was the first to quantify the cost of welfare payments to refugee
claimants (who may or may not be legit refugees), as well as to sponsored
immigrants whose relatives renege on supporting them. Every month she sends
an invoice for millions to Ottawa for this cost. The invoices have never
been paid.

"Let's find the numbers and see what it is," said Mayor Owen in a recent
interview with me. "It would be staggering, I'm sure, because I know the
police service costs dealing with this [immigration/refugee] issue."

The problem is not immigration or helping refugees. Good immigration is good
for Canada.

But Ottawa has never justified its target figure of 250,000 a year, in my
opinion. This is twice the level of U.S. immigration. Worse yet, half these
people are sponsored immigrants without qualifications to enter Canada.

Other countries adjust their numbers based on need. This target explains two
facts: unemployment is higher in Canada and despite huge immigration we face
a shortage of skilled workers.

Another problem facing Vancouver and other cities is that refugees are let
into Canada who aren't really refugees. We don't screen them. The result is
Ottawa every year imports into our society people with dangerous, infectious
diseases. Last year alone, estimates are that Ottawa turned loose on the
unsuspecting public more than 200 "refugees" with AIDS and more than 500
with non-treatable tuberculosis. Treatments cost our health care system
millions per patient.

Vancouver has suffered from a specific "refugee" problem over the past few
years: an army of bogus refugee claimants from Honduras smuggled into Canada
by the Colombian and Mexican drug cartels. (Why would we accept as refugees
teenagers from peaceful, democratic Honduras who arrive on foot or by car
from the United States?)

"We know with the Honduran problem that the drug cartels were bringing up
13- and 15-year-olds to be mules and pushers," said the mayor.

Hundreds came into Canada and few have been deported, according to police
sources. They live on welfare payments and illegal drug receipts, spreading
their "product" beyond the city's slummier drug-infested neighborhood.

"They would deport them and they would come back three and four times," said
the mayor, who has undertaken a unique and constructive battle against drug
usage in his city.

Others allowed into Canada include members of Chinese triads and Vietnamese
gangs, plus bikers from south of the border who are involved in the drug
business in Vancouver and elsewhere.

Mayor Owen -- like Mayor McCallion, myself and other immigration/refugee
policy critics -- is not opposed to letting people come into Canada. He's
concerned about costs without benefits and the fact that Ottawa has imported
drug traffickers, does not punish them and does not deport them.

Mayor Owen and his council have undertaken some of the most progressive drug
programs and have Canada's only drug policy co-ordinator. He has undertaken
educational programs, support for police efforts and been outspoken against
judges who hand down light sentences for serious drug crimes.

But he's not a law-and-order fanatic. The United States is and users clutter
the jails of that country.

"You can't incarcerate your way out of this problem and you can't liberalize
you're way out of it either," he said. "The user is sick and the pusher is
evil. You can't ignore it. And we're trying to do something about it. But we
need help from the other levels of government. And letting in drug dealers
and not deporting them is part of the problem."



Miroslav Antic,
http://www.antic.org/

THE END

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