Groups launch constitutional challenge of Safe Third Country Agreement
OTTAWA — Amnesty International Canada and the Canadian Council for Refugees have filed a new Federal Court challenge to the constitutionality of the Safe Third Country Agreement with the U.S. that says refugees must claim asylum in whichever country they arrive in first.
In 2023 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled refugees can avoid being sent back to the U.S. if they face unnecessary detention or the risk of deportation to a country where their rights and lives would be threatened.
These considerations are referred to as “safety valves” by people working in the migrant rights sector.
The refugee rights organizations say the Canada Border Services Agency is not properly applying this rule and is turning people away despite evidence their rights are threatened.
