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助叙利亚难民 加拿大联邦政府拨款1亿

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"安大略省长韦恩(Kathleen Wynne)也在周六宣布安省将拨款1050万元帮助叙利亚难民,并计划在2016年底前在安省安置1万名难民"。 韦恩疯了?也未必。根据规定,联合国须给每个难民5万美元安置费,大概不赔。
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如果一个人真心为了加拿大好,或者为了自己后代在加拿大生活好,肯定会支持保守党。关键是这里很多人是身在曹营心在汉,巴不得加拿大沦落。他们把中共的脸面看的比加拿大的利益重要。以此才有这些无聊的争论
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哈珀才是真正使加拿大沦落.。。搞秘密警察集权挑战加拿大宪法、法津与加拿大价值观.。。欠巨量国债去打没来由的战争, 欠债把加拿大的基本设施搞搞好也就算了, 起码为以后奠定一个基础, 有个希望吧。。。。这欠的钱都是打水漂了.
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加拿大是需要引进人口的国家,来源无非是:移民和难民;加拿大的发展是需要人口的,没有人口一切都免谈;引进难民主要两个方面的作用:1,补充加拿大的人口;2,尽义务,加拿大的安居乐业不是白来的!
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51网民也挺有意思的, 为什么哈珀政府花数百亿元去伊拉克打仗就一点不心痛钱.。。花区区1亿元安置难民就都跳起来了.。。 安置难民是可以提升国际形象的, 对加拿大以后的海外政治和经济都有好处.。。。而且这过程产生产业还不大多是国民得益, 最后有些人从中得到工作还要交一半税给国家。
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想来想去,我还是选哈珀,经济不好是因为石油下跌,是外部原因,不是加拿大自己造成的,只要油价不涨,现在哪个政党上台都搞不好;国家安全,公民的生命安全,这些比经济问题重要,哈勃能在大选时冒着落选的危险,把国家安全和公民的生命安全放到第一位,是个好总理。 如果选别的党,就算他们把经济搞好了(石油不涨,这是不可能的),可是万一难民里混入了恐怖分子,搞个大爆炸,命都没了,经济好有什么用?要钱还有什么用?
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确实国家安全是总理第一要责,老哈重视了,而老唐,小特都不懂,提都不提,恐怕都不知道总理的职责是啥,怎么能当总理呢?到目前为止,加拿大经济还是基本稳定的,石油价格从100多下降到三四十,加拿大经济只下滑0.5%,六月份还上升了0.5%,并没有大起大落,老哈在如此危难之时,能保持加拿大经济的基本呢稳定,还是难能可贵的
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国家安全重于选票!哈珀值得赞扬
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赞扬哈珀 !
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Harper表明立场,在没有确认难民没有国家安全隐患前不会用飞机接他们来 http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/ ... screening-1.3219359 Stephen Harper says Canada will not airlift refugees without proper security screening 'We are willing to take more people, but we must be sure we are helping the most vulnerable' Stephen Harper says the government is looking to improve the refugee resettlement process, but it will not airlift thousands of refugees from countries such as Syria and Iraq, where extremist organizations operate, without conducting a proper security screening. "To help, we must ensure we screen every potential refugee carefully. We have been clear that we are willing to take more people, but we must be sure we are helping the most vulnerable. "We cannot open the floodgates and airlift tens of thousands of refugees out of a terrorist war zone without proper process. That is too great a risk for Canada," Harper said on Tuesday during a question-and-answer session on Facebook. Syrian refugee crisis: Christy Clark pledges $1M to help refugees Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard to sponsor Syrian refugee family Harper and other world leaders have come under increased pressure to take in more refugees as the war in Syria continues to displace millions of people into neighbouring countries. Four million Syrians have already fled the country, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, which estimates that another 7.6 million people are displaced inside Syria. Harper said on Tuesday, during a morning campaign stop in Mississauga, Ont., that efforts to bring in more refugees cannot come at the expense of Canada's security. "This government has already announced prior to the latest round of headlines, we announced our intention to bring more Syrian and Iraq refugees to this country … we're looking to bring in more and we're looking to improve the process." "When we are dealing with people that are from, in many cases a terrorist war zone, we are going to make sure that we screen people appropriately and the security of this country is fully protected," Harper said. Conservative Party Leader Stephen Harper and his wife, Laureen, visited Facebook’s Canadian headquarters in Toronto for a Q&A session. (Facebook) In January, the Harper government announced it would resettle 10,000 more Syrian refugees over the next three years and another 3,000 Iraqi refugees by the end of 2015, in addition to the 20,000 Iraqi refugees who have already resettled in Canada. Harper also said Canada will continue to prioritize refugees who are ethnic and religious minorities — comments that previously drew the ire of his political rivals. "We are going to make sure that we are selecting the most vulnerable bona fide refugees. Obviously with a focus on the religious and ethnic minorities that are the most vulnerable," Harper said during a campaign stop in Mississauga. 'Bureaucratic trap' NDP Leader Tom Mulcair, who was in Dorval, Que., on Tuesday morning, criticized Harper for lacking the political will to take in more refugees. "You shouldn't have people in this desperate situation falling into a bureaucratic trap asked to produce identity papers, as if you had time to renew your driver's licence when you were walking across the desert with your family. "So you have to take that into account, having more people on the ground there would be a good idea. And, of course, we could use military assets to start moving refugees out of the area more rapidly," Mulcair said. Over the weekend, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau called on Harper to meet with him and the NDP leader to come up with an improved response to the crisis. Mulcair also said he had reached out to the Conservative leader. Harper later dismissed the proposed meeting as "partisan games." B.C. latest province to offer help The pressure on Harper to take in more refugees continued to mount on Tuesday when B.C. Premier Christy Clark became the fourth provincial leader in recent days to announce measures to help Syrian refugees resettle in Canada. The photograph of the Syrian toddler Alan Kurdi, whose body was found on a beach in Turkey after he drowned with his mother and brother trying to reach Europe, hit British Columbians particularly hard because the three-year-old's aunt lives in Coquitlam. The premiers of Nova Scotia, Quebec and Ontario also announced increased efforts to help Syrian refugees in the past week. ANALYSIS Refugee crisis makes for strange sights on Lesbos: Margaret Evans ANALYSIS Refugee crisis brings out best and worst in Europe: Nahlah Ayed The Canadian office for the United Nations Refugee Agency thanked Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil for his province's contribution of $50,000 for Syrian refugees. It also expressed gratitude to individual Canadians and other groups "for the outpouring of public support and donations" offered in response to the Syrian crisis. In a press release issued Tuesday, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said the agency only had enough funds to meet about 37 per cent of its needs for the Syrian emergency. Former Progressive Conservative prime minister Joe Clark said last week that Canada could take in refugees more quickly by sending Canadian officials to United Nations refugee camps where they could screen applicants in person. Clark said that's what his government did when it airlifted thousands of Vietnamese applicants to Canada from refugee camps in 1979. 'Agree to bring 50,000 of those frightened men, women and children to Canada. Say we'll do it by end-December.'–Rick Hillier, retired Canadian general Retired general Rick Hillier also added his voice to the debate on Sunday, urging the three main federal leaders to work together to bring 50,000 refugees to Canada by the end of the year. "Each of our federal leaders has said we must do more, so let's do it.… Challenge our provinces, cities, churches and individual Canadians to step up and help this get done. Let's do it instead of endlessly talking about doing it," Hillier said in a post on Facebook. Refugee applications processed 'within a year' Part of the struggle to bring refugees to Canada is based on the resources to process them. In 2012, Canada closed its visa processing office in Damascus, shunting hundreds of case files over to the already overstretched embassies in Jordan and Egypt. Then, the government did deploy additional staff to try to get a handle on a case backlog that included both refugee files and family sponsorship ones — cases in which people in Canada were trying to get their own families out of the war. But at that point, the government had made no firm commitments on Syrian refugee resettlement and staff were largely processing refugee cases belonging to Iraqis. A spokeswoman from Citizenship and Immigration Canada told CBC News that it was "difficult" to say how many of its staff are currently assigned to processing applications from refugees, because "we move work around the immigration network depending on where we have available resources and where files can be processed most quickly." "We are processing Syrian resettlement cases within a year and continue to look at ways to streamline processing," Nancy Caron said in an email to CBC News. Caron said processing times depend on a number of factors, including "the volume of applications, the security situation in the region and how quickly requirements such as security screening and medical examinations can be completed." She also noted that CIC has "reallocated resources and centralized the intake and processing of applications in Winnipeg to alleviate the administrative burden at visa offices overseas and reduce backlogs."
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长期以来,加拿大年国民平均收入在西方七国中垫底,连新加坡都不如,政府每年还要接受那么多难民,简直是大脑进水了,是不是等着联合国表扬吧!怎么不学一下美国和澳大利亚对待难民的态度。看来加拿大没有一个政党能够真正从国家和人民的利益考虑,只关心手中的选票,根本没有资格和水平组成精英政府,干脆不用进行联邦大选了,直接进行全民公决,并入美国算了。
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