Canada plans to "lead the charge" on the UN's global refugee plan
Christine Douglass-Williams | Tuesday, November 6, 2018 -- 3:14 PM EST
***Uploaded by CitizensDawn and Last updated on Tuesday, November 6, 2018 -- 3:25 PM EST***
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The Communist Jihad, Red Dawn has come to America. Why is it that UN global migration never encourages migration of Christians into Saudi Arabia or China?

***Article first published by 'Jihad Watch' on Oct. 5, 2018***

There are few moments in history where the world comes together to devise a new plan that holds the promise of improving the lives of millions of people. The Global Compact on Refugees…will be formally adopted by the UN General Assembly in the next couple of months—has the potential to be one of these moments.

As beautiful and benevolent as this sounds, it does and will not translate into a pretty picture.

The Center for Immigration Studies points out that “the Trump administration’s continued commitment to the UN agreement is puzzling,” because the administration announced a 2019 “refugee ceiling of 30,000, down from 45,000 for 2018 (both ceilings count as the lowest ceiling determinations since the creation of the refugee resettlement program following the Refugee Act of 1980).” But there is nothing puzzling about this. The ceiling reflects a responsible commitment, as it allows for better screening of who is coming into the United States.

The Trump administration has evidently remained respectful of the past agreements of the United Nations Convention on the Status of Refugees, and “the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees.” What Trump has opposed, however, is joining the bandwagon of reckless globalist leaders who are willing to subject their populations to increasing crime and the breakdown of the rule of law, as seen today in many areas across Europe, along with the expansion of Salafist influence.

The full aim of the Global Compact on Refugees is to get:

“more resettlement places and find more ways refugees can move to third countries – such as through family reunification, student scholarships, or humanitarian visas, so that refugees can travel safely (what we call ‘complementary pathways’).”

It has long been established that Europe has lost track of hundreds of thousands of its refugees, and that many so-called refugees are not refugees. They are economic migrants who have deliberately chosen to settle in the wealthiest countries in Europe. The United Nations admitted this last year, making “shocking claims that the majority of migrants” — 7 out of 10 — “are not refugees at all,” but “economic migrants.” Islamic State jihadists have also long infiltrated the migrant stream.

As stated by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau: “Millions of people around the world are fleeing their homes because of conflict and persecution. The international community must come together to address their immediate needs and to help rebuild their lives.”

The EU has already declared its intention to end “national sovereignty” and “kill off populist politics.” Trudeau is in line with that vision. The news that Canada will be leading the charge on the UN’s global refugee plan is sobering. Trudeau has rolled out the red carpet to anyone and everyone wanting to come into the Canada, including Islamic State jihadists, whom he thinks can be a “powerful voice.” Vast and untold numbers of migrants have also crossed into Canada from the United States over the Quebec border in response to Trudeau’s welcome. Canadians have no idea how many have crossed over, but taxpayers are expected to foot the bill. The Toronto Sun has just reported:

There are also 1,719 irregular (illegal) migrants/refugees/asylum seekers in Toronto hotels, including 577 housed at the Radisson Toronto East hotel in 146 rooms (the hotel has 240 rooms in total). The reputable Tripadvisor website has been inundated in the past few weeks with scathing reviews of the hotel, calling it a “zoo, filthy, noisy and dangerous” with the lobby full of loitering refugees and halls containing graffiti and garbage.

Ahmed Hussen, who is Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship and contributed to the article below, advances the globalist utopia of the Trudeau government. Hussen called Member of Provincial Parliament Lisa Macleod “‘un-Canadian’ in attempts to ‘bully’ her into accepting the federal government’s line on immigration.” However, Hussen admitted in the last week of August that Canada’s asylum system is in a state of crisis and is unsustainable. Yet a month before that, he stated that the system was working. Ahmed Hussen’s assignment to market — both at home and abroad — his ideas about “Canada leading the charge on the UN global refugee plan,” under the pretense of being “caring,” is deeply mendacious.

“Why Canada will lead the charge on the UN’s global refugee plan,” by Ahmed Hussen, Marie-Claude Bibeau, and Jean-Nicolas Beuze, Macleans, September 24, 2018:

Ahmed Hussen is Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship. Marie-Claude Bibeau is Canada’s Minister of International Development. Jean-Nicolas Beuze is the representative in Canada of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

There are few moments in history where the world comes together to devise a new plan that holds the promise of improving the lives of millions of people. The Global Compact on Refugees—which has now been released after two years of consultations with member states, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations, and refugees themselves, and will be formally adopted by the UN General Assembly in the next couple of months—has the potential to be one of these moments.

The Compact isn’t just a bunch of words on paper. It represents the common understanding and political commitment to protect and find solutions for refugees differently. This is why it lists new strategies and specific goals. Through regular follow-up meetings on the Compact, member states and partners will thus hold each other more accountable on their promises to deliver results for refugees and their hosts.

The starting premise of the Compact is that caring for those forced to flee their home is a shared responsibility that must be borne more equitably and predictably. As stated by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau: “Millions of people around the world are fleeing their homes because of conflict and persecution. The international community must come together to address their immediate needs and to help rebuild their lives.” The Compact and its renewed commitment toward refugees and the countries and communities that host them is a moment of truth, as it calls upon all players—development actors, the private sector, non-governmental and faith-based organizations, and states—to contribute and to share responsibilities in a fairer manner.

Canada was actively involved in the drafting of the Compact. With input from domestic NGOs, Canada was one of the first countries to offer concrete suggestions in the early days of the consultations around issues that the Compact should highlight and address, from the benefits of refugees’ economic inclusion, to the imperative of increasing political and financial support for frontline hosting countries, to ways to increase pathways to durable solutions in third countries, and to the specific vulnerabilities faced by refugee women and girls. And as the chair of UNHCR’s executive committee in 2017, Canada took an active role in convening partners on several issues in particular related to gender and education.

So Canada is committed to the task of leading and encouraging other partners to realize its ambitious goals, to ensure that action breathes life into the words of the Compact.

The Compact’s goals are, after all, ambitious. The first is clear: to ease the pressure on countries that welcome and host large numbers of refugees, currently mainly in the Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa. Frontline countries like Turkey, Lebanon, Uganda or Bangladesh have argued that the impact of hosting hundreds of thousands or even millions of refugees is significant, especially as it’s often after a sudden influx. They are right: distributing safe drinkable water, putting kids in schools or providing maternal health care to pregnant women are logistical and costly endeavours. These countries are unfairly being asked to carry the burden simply as a result of their geography as they nobly keep their borders open to those fleeing for their lives from neighbouring states…..

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