A revised US-Canadian deal states anyone who crosses into either country along the land border and who applies for asylum within 14 days will be turned back.
Asylum seekers cross border after US-Canada pact
Asylum seekers warned by police they could be sent back have continued to walk into Canada through the unofficial United States border crossing into Quebec at Roxham Road a day after the two countries amended a 20-year-old asylum pact trying to stem the influx.
US President Joe Biden and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced changes to the Safe Third Country Agreement on Friday after a record number of asylum seekers arrived in Canada via unofficial border crossings, putting pressure on Trudeau to address it.
The Safe Third Country Agreement, signed in 2002 and which came into effect in 2004, originally meant asylum seekers crossing into either Canada or the United States at formal border crossings were turned back and told to apply for asylum in the first “safe” country they arrived in.
Now it applies to the entire 6416km land border between the two countries.