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| | By Manuela Vega | | |
| | | Good morning. Here’s the latest on Canada’s use of jails for immigration detainees, the lack of accessible housing for people with disabilities and the mass shooting that targeted a Black neighbourhood. | | | |
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| | | | DON’T MISS | | |
| | Giovanni Capriotti for The Star | | |
| | | immigration | | | In an Immigration Holding Centre, detainees can wear their own clothes, have multiple daily visits and are not confined to cells. But in provincial jails, detainees are issued prison uniforms, they’re subject to violence and they can be placed in solitary confinement. Which location immigration detainees end up in is up to a simple administrative form completed by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA). Now, a new lawsuit is taking aim at Canada’s use of maximum-security provincial jails for immigration matters. Here’s why former detainees say their charter rights have been violated. - Context: Immigration detainees are not criminally charged and their detention is not supposed to be punitive. Still, people waiting on immigration hearings are getting the same treatment as those convicted of a crime.
- More: Although the average holding time is three weeks, Canada has held more than 300 detainees for a year or longer since 2016.
- Why it matters: The two plaintiffs suffer from PTSD, anxiety and depression as a result of the conditions they were held in as immigration detainees.
- Meanwhile: The Canadian branches of Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are lobbying provinces to cancel their contracts with the CBSA, saying its treatment of immigration detainees violates international human rights laws.
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| | Peter Power for The Star | | |
| | | housing | | | Khadija Zafar’s family has lived in Hamilton, Burlington and now Waterdown. But she and her husband still can’t find a home that meets the needs of their eight-year-old son with spastic quadraplegic cerebral palsy. Although his wheelchair grants him independence in many scenarios, the lack of accessibility in the housing market creates every-day barriers; their last home had stairs to the bedroom and to street level. Despite 2.6 million Ontarians being disabled, there’s no provincial policy mandating barrier-free housing. Here are some of the challenges one family has faced on their search for a home. - More: “As a mother we always have so much guilt in general but on top of that, you put a child with (a) disability and the things you can’t provide for them, you just feel terrible,” said Zafar.
- Now what? The co-chair of The Accessible Housing Network says the Ontario Building Code must require all new housing to be universal design, and several MPP candidates have signed on.
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| | Matt Rourke/AP Photo | | |
| | | united states | | | | Ten people were killed and another three were injured over the weekend thanks to a white man equipped with racist conspiracy theories and an assault rifle, Buffalo police say. The mass shooting in a Black neighbourhood is being felt deeply in Toronto, where many think of Buffalo as an extension of the city, Edward Keenan writes. Canada is no stranger to hate-motivated attacks, but the ease with which anyone can access guns in the U.S. has normalised mass shootings — at least 70 occurred in the decade leading up to 2022. Plus, some of the shooters behind the worst massacres in recent years have touted shared ideologies. Here’s what we know about the racist ideas that motivated the Buffalo shooter — and that are becoming increasingly common in right-wing politics. | | | |
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| | | | | | Get a front-row seat this provincial election. As the Ontario election heats up, you need This Week in Politics, featuring exclusive analysis from Queen's Park bureau chief Robert Benzie and columnist Susan Delacourt. Sign up here, and you'll start receiving their insight on what just happened, what it means — and what's coming next. | | | | | | |
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| | | | WHAT ELSE | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | A driver was sentenced to 17 years for the “catastrophic” crash that killed a GTA mom and her three daughters. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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| | | | CLOSE-UP | | |
| | Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP | | |
| | | UKRAINE: A man stands by a destroyed bridge near the village of Rus’ka Lozova, north of Kharkiv, on Monday. Ukraine said its troops have regained control of territory on the Russian border near the country’s second-largest city, which has been under constant fire since Moscow’s invasion began. | | | |
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| | | Thank you for reading. You can reach me and the First Up team at firstup@thestar.ca. I’ll see you back here tomorrow. | | | |
| | Toronto Star Newspapers Limited. One Yonge Street, 4th Floor, Toronto, ON M5E 1E6. 416-367-2000 | | PRIVACY POLICY | | | | |
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