Canadians remain
divided about the resettlement of Syrian refugees, with some saying
Canada should accept more despite a series of racist incidents that have
marred a mostly smooth arrival of nearly 25,000 migrants, a poll showed
on Friday. Liberal
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was elected in October on a promise to
accept more Syrian refugees more quickly than the previous Conservative
government had allowed, but the original deadline for accepting 25,000
by the end of 2015 proved too ambitious and the timeline was extended by
two months. During his
election campaign, Trudeau said a Liberal government would work with
private sponsors to accept "even more" than the immediate goal of
25,000, and Immigration Minister John McCallum said in December the
government could double the intake to 50,000 by the end of 2016. A
poll by the Angus Reid Institute released on Friday showed 52 percent
of Canadians support the plan to resettle 25,000 refugees before the end
of February, while 44 percent opposed the program. The
poll also showed that 42 percent of respondents want Canada to stop
taking in Syrian refugees, while 29 percent said Canada should stop at
25,000 and 29 percent said the country should accept even more. Some 21,672 Syrian
refugees - sponsored by both private citizens and the government - have
arrived in Canada since November, dispersing into more than 200
communities, according to the Immigration Department. While
the arrival has been smooth for privately sponsored refugees supported
by families or community groups, hundreds of government-sponsored
refugees have struggled to find housing and remain in hotels in Toronto,
where the housing market is tight and expensive. There has also
been a scattering of racist incidents, including one last week in which
graffiti was sprayed on a school in the western Canadian city of Calgary
urging "Syrians go home and die" and "kill the traitor Trudeau." The
prime minister responded on Twitter: "Canadians have shown the best of
our country in welcoming refugees. That spirit won't be diminished by
fear and hate." In January, a group
of Syrian refugees were pepper-sprayed by a cyclist in Vancouver, an
attack Trudeau also condemned on Twitter.
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