People willing to endure what the Tamils did are just the kind we want

COYNE: Call it the ‘bottom of the boat’ test

by Andrew Coyne on Friday, August 20, 2010 6:00am - 0 Comments

Jonathan Hayward/CP

For all the breathless coverage it has attracted, it’s still unclear just what the issue is in the matter of the boatload of Tamils that arrived off the coast of B.C. last week.

For starters, there is very little that anyone can do about it, or would, beyond what is being done already. No one is suggesting we should have turned the boat back on the high seas, or expelled the Tamils without hearing their refugee claims; both options are in any case illegal. Neither is anyone proposing that they should be admitted to our soil without a proper vetting, to ensure at a minimum that no terrorists lurk amongst them.

For all its tough talk about “sending a message” to any “criminals” out there who might be thinking of organizing other such excursions, the Harper government has in fact been handling the situation with admirable humanity, winning praise from, among others, the United Nations Human Rights Commission.

The Tamils have been well looked after, their ailments treated, their claims heard promptly. The system, in other words, is working.

So why all the fuss? There’s a suspicion that the organizers may be Tamil Tigers, the notorious terrorist group. The Tigers themselves are a despicable bunch, but helping hundreds of desperate people to reach freedom would seem the least of their crimes. Sometimes this is called “human smuggling” or “trafficking,” to give it an unseemly taint. But smuggling implies an attempt to evade detection: this ship, by contrast, went about its business openly. And while trafficking in human beings is obviously horrific when the “cargo” is destined for slavery, in this case the destination is Canada. However unpleasant their conditions may have been aboard ship, the $50,000 each of the Tamils reportedly paid for their passage is surely a bargain, if it means a chance to live in Canada.

Is that the problem, then: are the Tamils, as it is said, “jumping the queue”? But there is no queue for refugee claimants. Of the 40,000-odd refugee claims Canada receives every year, about a quarter are made from Canada (as opposed to being made at embassies or refugee camps overseas). You show up with a valid claim, you’re in: doesn’t matter how many people arrive ahead of or behind you. The Prime Minister complains that the Tamils did not go through “normal channels,” but in fact it’s a completely normal channel: the only difference is they arrived by boat, rather than by plane.

Some are concerned that this might be the first (well, the second: the first arrived last October) of many similar deliveries. The same dire warning was issued when a boatload of Sikhs arrived off the coast of Nova Scotia in 1987. Never happened. Apart from a few Chinese boats the following decade, that’s been about it for amphibian invasions.

Doesn’t mean it won’t happen this time. And this would be a problem because . . . why? If their claims are genuine, we should be happy to admit them. A few thousand more refugees is not going to overwhelm us.

Of course, I have no way of knowing if the Tamils’ claims are genuine: post-civil war Sri Lanka is by all accounts an unpleasant place for them, but not perhaps lethal. And admittedly, the current process for detecting and expelling false refugee claimants is a tortuous one. So I propose a simpler, streamlined test.

Instead of holding lengthy hearings at great cost to detect whether a claimant is seeking entry by virtue of a “well-founded fear of persecution,” and not for some other reason, I suggest the question should be: have you just spent four months in the bottom of a boat to get here?

Perhaps it will be decided that the Tamils are mere economic migrants. Many people are very exercised about this, preferring that economic class immigrants go through the battery of tests the Immigration Department has devised to predict which of them will flourish most in Canada’s economy. Very well. I have a simple test for this, too. Here it is: have you just spent four months in the bottom of a boat to get here?

Whatever it is the Tamils are trying to get away from, whether persecution or privation, it’s got to be horrible enough to make the prospect of four months in steerage with a litre of water a week to drink worth bearing. And while Immigration-style points tests may be good at assessing certain types of skills (or not: for all the alleged sophistication of the tests, the “quality” of immigrants has apparently been declining in recent years), economic success is as much about character and determination as anything else—the kind of determination that would move a person to sit in a darkened hold eating spiders for four months, just for a chance to better their lot. If that’s queue-jumping, fine: these are the sort of people we want.

Remember the Vietnamese boat people of the 1970s? We let in 60,000 of them in the space of a couple of years. Most were farmers, fishermen and labourers, with little in the way of conventional skills. A decade later they were outperforming the native-born population on any number of indicators, with an unemployment rate a third lower than the norm.

I don’t think anybody can really say why a given person might have chosen to leave the country of his birth. Countries that repress their populations also tend to be economic backwaters, and it stands to reason people’s motives might be mixed. Perhaps we needn’t bother trying to separate them: the bottom-of-a-boat test works either way.

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  • NiceGuy

    Why bother then with an Immigration or Refugee system at all then? Just let anyone float up and stake their claim…collect their welfare and expensive medical treatment.

    Sounds like a beer commercial…I have a raft, I am Canadian!

    • Mark R

      Step further. Why wait.
      Let's go out and start looking for people to migrate here.

      • Mulletaur

        That's exactly how most European immigrants got here in the first place. The Canadian government put posters up in every corner of Europe down to the smallest hamlet encouraging people to emigrate to Canada and in many cases offering them land and money to do so.

        • A_READER_

          Yes, yes, agreed. and still will – legally!

          But that was then and this is now.
          DIfferent times man, and nostaglia is not exactly what I want in a leader to bend to.

          • brooster

            Yeah, the guy we got now is living in the 50s.

  • Guest

    Good to see some rational commentary on this, congratulations to Andrew Coyne for a thoughtful piece. The usual overheated bluster is restricted to (some of) the comments.

  • tyler

    the ansewer to this question is simple all those who want these lovely do no wrong people to stay riase your hand and we will send to your nieghbourghood.

  • Crit_Reasoning

    Instead of holding lengthy hearings at great cost to detect whether a claimant is seeking entry by virtue of a “well-founded fear of persecution,” and not for some other reason, I suggest the question should be: have you just spent four months in the bottom of a boat to get here?

    And what about refugees from war-torn countries who travel to Canada in relative comfort? Should they be denied because they didn't endure enough privations to get here?

    As Colby Cosh points out, Coyne appears to propose that "a well-designed obstacle course could entirely replace immigration policy tout court". Is there some satirical element here that I'm missing?

    • Bill Simpson

      But the whole exercise of migration is a well-designed obstacle course! If you suppose that it is managed on the basis of reason and fairness, you are sadly mistaken. And yes, having money, connections and some cunning in your approach does improve your chances. This is as it should be. There is no other way of managing it, save dedicating the rest of our resources and time to sorting out the worthy from the unworthy.

      • Crit_Reasoning

        Maybe I'm just a starry-eyed idealist, but I think it's possible for Canada's refugee system to be managed on the basis of reason, fairness, and individual assessments. Coyne seems to think that just by making it to Canada, applicants have passed some sort of test of "character and determination", and that's all the information Canada needs to let someone in.

        • Mulletaur

          I think we have already firmly established on these blogs that the Harper government is no friend of reason, but I guess hope springs eternal. In any case, I don't think Coyne is against reason, fairness and individual assessments – he's just more in favour of social libertarianism.

          • Crit_Reasoning

            Thanks for your topical, value-added contribution to this discussion.

          • Mulletaur

            You're welcome, no charge.

        • Kifaru

          Central planning doesn't work. Better that all scarce resources be privately owned in and around 'Canada'; then, it's up to private owners to decide whether to invite a Tamil on his property.

    • Style

      And what does he have against refugees from landlocked countries? Maybe he has some history with Andorra he needs to divulge…Or maybe he just wants an excuse for Air Canada to cut back its services even more.

    • Gaunilon

      Shouldn't we let them all in, regardless of how they got here, as long as they're not criminals?

      The only relevance I see vis-a-vis the boat-trip aspect is that they seem to be willing to put up with a lot to get here. That speaks well of them, but otherwise it's irrelevant to the whole immigration question.

    • Viva_Vivian

      I'm actually surprised I had to get to two pages of comments before coming across somebody critical of the frankly silly premise Coyne perches his argument upon. He shows his ass on this one — someone is brown and from another country, therefore they must be enduring the worst Third World hell you can imagine. As far as I know, reports about the state of the ship itself do not remark upon its unsuitability to host 500 persons. Sri Lanka is currently boasting economic success above average. This isn't Sudan we're talking about, and it's unfortunate that the image of the immigrant remains one of the unwashed, unskilled but eager to work toilet cleaners Canada needs because "Canadians" won't do the jobs they will. This Canada is not my grandfather's Canada, who contributed in nation building. The social programs that prop up immigrants like they are newborns did not exist then. This story, unique enough to garner national attention, shows the rots within the immigration and socialist systems, and the cunning of a people worldly enough to bypass Australia to a country where white guilt reigns supreme and fakers pat themselves on the back for standing up for the little guy.

  • Style

    Except the test here is "could you get on a boat from Sri Lanka?" Which either cost $50,000 or involved political connections. Which means you jumped the queue ahead of less wealthy or well-connected Sri Lankans. You can wait in Canada while your claim is processed (and remain for quite a while even if it's denied). They will wait in Sri Lanka, probably in one of the camps. And your $50K may have enriched the LTTE. So, yeah, there is a problem with the boats that should be fairly obvious. The solution, I admit, is not so obvious.

    • Viva_Vivian

      Collacott said the Tamil Tigers have made "particular use of the refugee system to get in their supporters, they have operated a lot of the people-smuggling that got people in over the last 20 years."

      "And at one point, the Toronto Police task force estimated there were 8,000 trained Tamil terrorists in Toronto alone, so, it's been used both for just getting people in who wouldn't qualify normally by international standards, but also for getting terrorists into Canada. And it's expected, it's believed that there are quite a few Tamil Tigers, or their supporters, on this ship."

      In June 2000, the National Post reported that Toronto police believed up to 8,000 Tamils living in the city held links to Tamil terror groups, including the Tamil Tigers.
      http://edmonton.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/2…

  • Dsoudas

    The Tamils fought for an independent state and failed. Now they are seeking to establish a new homeland in Canada. Will they seek to establish an independent state within Canada? The Tamils have options – they could go to India which would be a better fit culturally. They went to Australia and were directed to a remote island for processing but decided to sail to Canada instead. The Tamils are at best economic refugees.

  • SunshineCoaster

    The controversy over the Tamil refugees is entirely one of Harper's making. There is no public safety issue and the Tamils have not enterred Canada illegally. The real reason for the kerfuffle, is that Harper was desperate for an issue that would resonate with his base and would serve to change the channel from his own political and policy debacles that currently dominate public discourse. Old family values Vic Toews could be counted on to serve up belicose nonsense suggesting terrorism will overwhelm Canada if we don't act now. Has anyone noticed that Immigration Minister Kenny has been largely silent on this issue and that this government has failed to act on this after almost five years in office?

    • Viva_Vivian

      Yeah! Screw family values! Who needs them?

      Oh, wait…..

  • A_READER_

    Have a site that's a good read about an Iraqi's experience coming to Canada.
    This gives me hope as this is what I hope immigration means, doing it the proper way.

    What impressed me most about the Canadian immigration authorities is that they knew exactly that I was a religious Moslem as was clear from my passport with pilgrimage visas to Mecca all over it. My wife also wears the headscarf. Nevertheless, these authorities seemed to have discerned the fact that we were not terrorist sympathisers, I don’t know quite how. I mean they didn’t read my blog nor did they know anything about it. Also, absolutely no political or faith related questions were ever asked. Yet they seemed to understand, and they were very helpful and waived many requirements. That impressed me hugely. So, Mike, it is not a question of headscarf, nor even what religious faith one has; but something quite different and much more complex. I really hope to be able to come back to this subject later, and explain more fully my own religious concepts and beliefs and read the views and comments of my friends about this all important subject. http://messopotamian.blogspot.com/search?updated-…

    Great blog, I'm sure many of you missed, been following this young man since he started.
    Not sure if the link will go through or not, but it's the THE MESOPOTAMIAN – archive of 2007.

    AND during the liberals' rule they let saddams friends in.

  • Tom

    Mr. Coyne you are drinking too much cool-aid.
    How much is the Liberal Party paying Macleans?
    Urban Canada is turning into a sort of Balkan/Malaysian melange day by day as a result of a dysfunctional national migration and refegee policy.

    • scott

      No kidding!!!!!!! There's alot of Liberals on this board… There is a Process to get here. And anybody that doesn't think that this is a scam is either a Tamil or is in desperate need of counseling..

  • NiceGuy

    So Andrew Coyne supports sweatshops and the sex trade? Cause that's where they're gonna wind up.

    And here I thought you were boring AC.

  • hutch4101

    Mr. Coyne – refugees simply do not have $50,000 to pay for a trip! Doesn't anybody ever wonder where that kind of money comes from? Particularly for people from Third World countries that have been at war for years? If they have that much money at their disposal why not take a plane, first class even? I am not against refugees trying to settle in Canada, I am totally against people trying to buy their way here under false pretense.

  • JEAllen

    Thanks Andrew for such a reasoned view of the Issue. The fact that this is an issue at all is a not to difficult puzzle. Political Theatre has Replaced Governance in Canada.

    Seems we have a Gov't that not only Creates crisis out of nothing but then bombards Canadians with odd and suspicious perspectives, hate, fearmongering, misinformation and has shameless knack for turning people against each other so that they can distract us from what they are actually doing, whatever that may be.

  • T. Kumaran

    Andrew Coyne, Thank you for this write – up.

    I have also read the column today by Kelly McParland on the National Post about most Canadians want to send the Tamil new-comers back.

    I believe only when the humanitarian plight is said more and more in the Canadian media – at least the people who took this route will not be blamed for taking such a gruesome journey. Right now it is all 'mixed' in with the brutal tactics of LTTE and last year's closure of Gardiner Expsway etc.

    It is justifiable for one to see that these people are queue jumpers when others endure pain of waiting, I think more and more in the media needs to be said as to why the Tamils are fleeing in the first place. The injustices for six decades since the British rule ended in Ceylon – the disenfranchisement, race riots, pogroms, enforced disappearances and mass civilian murders and now loss and denial of livelihood for survivors.

  • T. Kumaran

    Many 'Tamil Nationalists' would actually want to see the Tamils remain in Sri Lanka as the country's aim is to uproot the Tamils and reduce them to a further minority in Sri Lanka – dead or alive.

    Nobel Laureates Prof Elie Wiesel and Archbishop Desmond Tutu and several such noble personalities of this era have highlighted the conditions in Sri Lanka. I thank Andrew Coyne once again this write up.

  • Nilu Gunathunga

    wow, there are a lot of ignorant ppl here..those who made irrational, inhumane comments in the face of people fearing persecution, i hope ur happy leading sheltered lives that many people around the globe do not enjoy.No one died and made you guys the kings/queens of the world.this abundance of land that the earth has provided is more than enough for every one of us.Earth belongs to everyone!!Let the Tamils and any other race of people who fear for their lives elsewhere into Canada.This land is for everyone to share.Anything short of that ideology is inherently racist.

    • scott

      Let me guess Your a Tamil…..

      There is a Process to get here. And anybody that doesn't think that this is a scam is either a Tamil or is in desperate need of counseling..

    • Viva_Vivian

      When all else fails play the race card, right, Sivapillai Thevasalingam?

      This land has processes and legislation in place that make it the place the vast majority of Tamils immigrate to instead of carving out a life in their homeland. Recognize the difference.

  • Kifaru

    Don't blame the Tamils. Blame the Canadian govt. for stealing taxpayers' money in order to fund the refugees.

    If locals want to help out these refugees, that ought to be a Canadian's choice.

  • guest

    Coyne. What an idiot!

  • notimpressed

    Coyne's missing the point. They've gamed Canada and they've gamed the UN's refugee system. You go to the nearest point of entry – you don't sail half way across the world to a country you've deliberately targeted. That's not acceptable. And Mr. Coyne, where are all the refugees Canada has interviewed and turned down? Ask Sheila Fraser. The bulk, 41 000 at last count, have simply disappeared. The system ain't working.

  • A_READER_

    What a load of BS.

    Canadians for quite a while now ( historically not always) have always embraced everyone, no matter what the skin colour or religious background, name me one other, for example, westernized country that has as many visible minorities as MP's and let me know…. Prove otherwise or you're every bit as bigoted as the Canadians you just labeled 'racist'. Or maybe you're just ignorant.

    It's only since terrorism started on this continent that people started with the racist b/s when anyone dared asked 'who are we letting in?".
    We've given refuge to many over the years, boat people from Vietnam, many who've stayed and some who chose to return, remembering the Kurdish was it, in the mid or late 90's, most chose to go back home, not a problem for us either, we helped them…so how racist are we agian?

    Only dividing lines I ever see are socio-economic ones.
    That's the actual fact of the matter, but the liberals will swear otherwise and call anyone of differing views, racist while finding no fault with the enemy.
    Like piracy, corrupition, tyrany, it's wrong, don't allow it to happen in the first place is best.
    It's not about racism or religion, it really never is but that's the consistent argument back from them no matter what.
    Besides it's being handled well, from my understanding. We were their second choice, remember.

    • Viva_Vivian

      Great post. Some folks like to act as if immigration is an entirely new concept and the KKK's founding members came out of Alberta. Human beings are not exempt from scrutiny because of colour, religion, or past misdeeds in a nation's history. This type of "argument" is simply lazy and parrot-like in its regurgitation.

  • Philanthropist

    BS.

  • billy

    I don't want to hear,just send them back.

  • lawry

    :
    a) More than half of the Tamil population of Sri Lanka live in Sinhalese areass. They have lived, traded, worked and studied there since the last century.
    b) Throw a stone into the affluent suburbs of Colombo 4 or 5 and it will most likely hit a Tamil.
    c)Visit the 'Majestic shopping complex" in Colombo 4 and you will find (like I did last month) that 75 percent or more of the Traders are Tamils.
    e))Most of the Tamils who migrated to countries like Australia, UK. Canada and the EU were educated for "Free" in the Government run
    and Govermnet assisted schools of Sri Lanka.
    The tales of woe, we hear, like Discrimination, killings, rape and genocide is bunkum. And can only be claimed by the radicals who chose to fight the GOSL forces and waged a war of terror on inocent civilians , bombing public places and killing thousands in the process.
    Get wise Canada these are mostly Economic migrants who will at the first opportunity (after they are granted permanent residency) fly
    back to Srilanka to flaunt their new found wealth to their kith and kin
    back home.

  • AlexB

    Mr. Coyne, you don't know that these "migrants" knew in advance they'd be stuck in the bottom of a ship for 4 months on severely limited rations. They first went to Australia, which is very far from Canada, and then turned to Canada. It's safe to assume that they thought they'd only be at sea for a short time and not endure a very hard 4-month trip. They didn't choose to endure the 4-month hardships, they were left with no choice when they found themselves stuck at sea.

  • Polyester74

    I agree, I am not Sri Lankan (or Asian) but was in Sri Lanka in 2004 for a university field trip.

    In Colombo, there are Hindu temples, Buddhist temples and Mosques standing side-by-side. Street signs, governemnt offices and even paper money have both official languages: Sinhalese and Tamil. Therefore, this means that the government recognizes the Tamil people and they are perhaps not as oppressed as we have been led to believe.

    The Sinhalese are the majority, mainly Buddhist, while the Tamils, hailing originally from the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu, were brought to northern Sri Lanka by the British as workers on the tea plantations. They eventually wished to claim northeastern Sri Lanka as independent Tamil land and that is how the war began.

    Remember, there is always more than one side to any story.

  • Harvey Mushman

    So the new criteria for entering Canada should be the level of suffering you have endured to get here?

    I'm sure the "human traffickers" will be back this approach. We'll soon have people stacked like human lumber on slave ships headed for our shores. It'll be a high priced ticket…but it would certainly guarantee your acceptance into Canada! Way more profitable for the smugglers too, cut costs, increase volume.

    Sounds like a lucrative business opportunity.

    • Harvey Mushman

      …oops…typo…should read…"will back this approach."

      Where's my editor!!!!

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