Nova Scotia

Group wants Canada to bring in 20,000 African refugees

A Halifax-based group wants the federal government to begin working to bring 20,000 African refugees to Canada, applying the same settlement efforts it used to assist Syrian refugees last year.

African Diaspora Association of the Maritimes wants commitment similar to Syrian refugee efforts

Children walk together amongst makeshift homes, or "tukuls", in the outskirts of Dagahaley settlement at Kenya's Dadaab refugeec camp. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

A Halifax-based group wants the federal government to begin working to bring 20,000 African refugees to Canada, applying the same settlement efforts it used to assist Syrian refugees last year.

The African Diaspora Association of the Maritimes says it contacted Ahmed D. Hussen, federal minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship on Friday as well as Nova Scotia Immigration Minister Lena Diab.

"These people are displaced by war. I would say 90 per cent of refugees in these refugee camps are there because of war," said Godfred Chongatera, immigration lawyer and chair of the African Diaspora Association of the Maritimes.

"There should be a deliberate effort on the part of the federal government to focus some attention on African refugees."

Godfred Chongatera is an immigration lawyer and the chair of the African Diaspora Association of the Maritimes. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, sub-Saharan Africa hosts more than 26 per cent of the world's refugee population.

The world's biggest refugee camp is Dadaab, located in Kenya. As of March, there were 249,144 refugees living there.

In Ethiopia, there were 209,158 people at the refugee camp Dollo Ado.

Focus on Africa

Chongatera says African refugee camps existed well before the Syrian conflict broke out. He said some people have been in the camps for 20 years, with children being born and growing up there.

Another reason to accept more African refugees now, Chongatera said, is because of the risks African asylum seekers are making to get across the Canadian border from the U.S.

"If the government takes the lead, it will help," he said.

 "We are not in any way against Syrian refugees or government bringing Syrian refugees. We support it and we think the government should continue to do that but we think there is a real problem in Africa."​

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Anjuli Patil

Reporter

Anjuli Patil is a reporter and occasional video journalist with CBC Nova Scotia's digital team.

With files from CBC Radio's Mainstreet