Saturday, November 26, 2016

Nationalist movements could smother 

Justin Trudeau: Paul Wells

The Trudeau government is built entirely on the driving assumptions 
of the era. And yet the Trudeau government finds itself operating in a 
world that’s sprinting away from these assumptions.
Justin Trudeau, with Argentine President Mauricio Macri and his wife Juliana Awada in Buenos Aires, now leads a government in crisis.It’s not a crisis Trudeau made, but he’s stuck with it — the crisis of globalization, writes Paul Wells.
Justin Trudeau, with Argentine President Mauricio Macri and his wife Juliana Awada in Buenos Aires, now leads a government in crisis.It’s not a crisis Trudeau made, but he’s stuck with it — the crisis of globalization, writes Paul Wells.  (SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS)  

CBC INVESTIGATES

Clients of convicted immigration consultant facing deportation for lying

500 more people under investigation for falsely obtaining permanent residency and Canadian citizenship

By Eric Rankin, CBC News Posted: Nov 25, 2016 9:10 PM ET Last Updated: Nov 25, 2016 9:39 PM ET
Pei Jia Li peeks through the doors after his hearing at the Immigration and Refugee Board this week in Vancouver.  He was ruled 'inadmissible to Canada' for having fraudulent entry and exit stamps in his passport.
Pei Jia Li peeks through the doors after his hearing at the Immigration and Refugee Board this week in Vancouver. He was ruled 'inadmissible to Canada' for having fraudulent entry and exit stamps in his passport. (Harold Dupuis/CBC )
One by one, many of the 1,200 former clients of an unlicensed Richmond, B.C., immigration consultant are getting the bad news — they're no longer welcome in Canada because they lied.
CBC News has learned 320 immigrants, who each paid thousands of dollars to New Can Consulting and owner Xun (Sunny) Wang, are now facing deportation to China.
One year ago, Wang, 47, was convicted of one of the biggest immigration scams in Canadian history — making $10 million by filing fraudulent immigration applications for his clients.
In one of his ploys, Wang falsely used his own home in Richmond as an address for 114 of his clients who didn't live in Canada. 
Xun 'Sunny' Wang Richmond house
Convicted immigration fraudster Xun (Sunny) Wang used his own home in Richmond as a fake address for at least 114 of his clients. (Mike Zimmer/CBC )
His appeal of his seven-year prison term and $900,000 fine was rejected last month.
Three of his former employees will be sentenced in January and three more are awaiting trial. At least three others have warrants out for their arrest.
Now the Canada Border Services Agency says of Wang's 320 ex-clients facing review of their immigration status, approximately 200 could be stripped of their citizenship and 120 could lose their permanent residency status.
Hundreds of other former New Can clients could also be in trouble.

500 more cases being investigated

In an email to CBC News, the border agency said it is continuing efforts to "uncover fraud on approximately 500 cases remaining to be investigated".
That means out of the 1,200 clients of New Can, over 800 could ultimately be sent back to China.
Guo Liang Lin is one of them.
At his recent hearing before the Immigration Refugee Board (IRB), the clean-cut man in his late 40s was ruled "inadmissible to Canada due to misrepresentation."
Eric Leung and Guo Liang Lin
Immigration consultant Eric Leung, left, and client Guo Liang Lin. Lin admits he signed documents that said he lived in Canada three times longer than he actually had to obtain permanent residency. Lin was working with a different immigration company at the time, which he blames for falsifying records. (Manjula Dufresne/CBC )
Lin was issued an exclusion order, banning him from re-entry into Canada for five years unless he gets permission from immigration officials to come back sooner — something an immigration and refugee spokesperson says rarely happens.
Lin immediately launched an appeal on humanitarian and compassionate grounds, a move that will allow him to remain in Canada for nine to 12 months until his case is reviewed by the Immigration Appeal Division.

Passport 'falsified'

To obtain details of Lin's case, CBC News attended his IRB hearing on Nov. 23.
The board adjudicator heard that Lin, who received permanent resident status in 2010, had spent just seven months in Canada over five years — not the minimum two years required by law.
This allowed him to live and work in China, while keeping his wife, son and daughter in B.C.
But his passport was altered by New Can Consulting, his IRB hearing heard, with entry and exit stamps falsified to make it appear Lin had spent 980 days, or just over 2½ years, in Canada.
Permanent residents are entitled to most social benefits in Canada, including health care.
CBSA handout of fake stamps in a seized passport
A page of a passport showing entry and exit stamps that were falsified to meet residency requirements to maintain permanent residence in Canada. (CBSA)
Despite his prolonged absences in the past, Lin says being forced to return to China will unfairly separate him from his wife and children.
"[My] family members are all in Canada," he told CBC News outside his hearing, "So me alone in China, this is a hardship".
Fake passport New Can
Seized passports and stamps used in the immigration scam by New Can Consulting are displayed by the Canada Border Services Agency. (CBSA)
Lin's new immigration consultant, Eric Leung, who is helping Lin with his IRB case, blames the deceptive practices of New Can consulting, saying Lin was an innocent victim who signed documents that were in English, not his native Mandarin.
"My client did not understand English, so they trusted the agent. The agent asked [him] to sign, and [he] signed."

$7-million home

CBC News attended an IRB hearing for another former client of New Can Consulting, Pei Jia Li.
Li, 51, lives in a $7-million Kerrisdale home and drives a luxury SUV.
A permanent resident, he also had fraudulent entry and exit stamps in his passport, his IRB hearing heard — and he, too, was quickly ruled inadmissible to Canada on grounds of misrepresentation.
Pei Jia Li's house
Pei Jia Li, a permanent resident who has fraudulent entry and exit stamps in his passport, lives in this $7-million home in Kerrisdale, an affluent neighbourhood in Vancouver. (Harold Dupuis/CBC )
Like Lin, Li has filed an appeal.
Li pulled a hoodie over his head and later roared off in his SUV when approached by CBC News.
But his lawyer, Andrew Wlodyka, also blames New Can Consulting for the possible deportation orders now facing 800 of the company's former clients.
"The consultants were absolutely dealing with people who are totally ignorant. They didn't even realize that the consultant was not even licensed," says Wlodyka.
Andrew Wlodyka
Lawyer Andrew Wlodyka, who represented Pei Jia Li at his admissibility hearing, says the clients of the convicted consultant are victims and should be allowed to stay in Canada. (Harold Dupuis/CBC)
"A lot of these people have actually made a significant contribution to Canadian society. They laid roots here, they've bought property, they've established businesses. So it's a really tragic situation."
"All of the circumstances have to be looked at to determine whether booting them out of Canada is the right thing."
Both Li and Lin have indicated they will argue they weren't responsible for the fraudulent tactics of New Can Consulting. But they could face an uphill battle.
The federal court has ruled that misrepresentation in immigration cases can be direct or indirect. If a consultant misrepresents a client, the client is ultimately responsible for that misrepresentation, since the immigrant has a duty to ensure their information is complete and accurate.

More needed to stop 'ghost consultants'

Still, Lin's immigration consultant Eric Leung maintains his client isn't at fault.
He says the Canadian government hasn't been keeping other immigration consultants honest.
"The problem is there must be somebody doing something to manage those we call ghost consultants or those licensed consultants doing something not right," he says.
Leung believes that while New Can has been shut down and owner (Sunny) Wang thrown in prison, other dishonest consultants are still busy filing fraudulent claims on behalf of clients.
"We should not stop the investigation. We have to find all of them. I personally do think there are always non-stop cheating issues around our country, around B.C. province. Definitely."
If Leung's suspicion is followed up by Canadian immigration officials, it could mean many more permanent residents and Canadian citizens who obtained their status through dubious consultants could be looking over their shoulders in the months to come.
With files from Manjula Dufresne
The Source:http://www.cbc.ca/news/investigates/clients-of-convicted-immigration-consultant-facing-deportation-for-lying-1.3868330
Comment:
The Integrity of the Immigration system

Too little … too late

I’m glad to see that Ottawa is finally cracking down on past “pay to play” visa scams run by Chinese con artists.

It took 25 years for the politicians to allow CBSA to do what had to be done with the Chinese.

CBSA will make a belated show of taking away a few hundred visas and passports. Meanwhile, political complicity has assured over a million non-resident Canadians in Asia. They all got in by lying to a government that wanted to be lied to.     

Will it take another 25 years of political complicity before CBSA is allowed to turn the flashlight on a couple of other even more massive criminal immigration operations?

  • Ontario’s multi-billion dollar construction foreign worker scam
  • The corrosive Punjabi-World Sikh Organization visa scam

Maybe Europeans (including Italian and Portuguese workers) should ask CBSA Minister Ralph Goodale for advice as to which foundations or politicians are in the rigged “pay to play” visa game? After all, we don’t want to make the same mistake as the Chinese and miss someone.    

Richard Boraks, November 26 2016

Van Jones blasts Trump in Toronto speech, warns Canada 'whitelash' could happen here

'I am not qualified to be president of the United States. Nor is the president-elect,' pundit says

By John Rieti, CBC News Posted: Nov 22, 2016 8:38 PM ET Last Updated: Nov 23, 2016 11:00 AM ET
Van Jones was in Toronto Tuesday to discuss the recent U.S. election.
Van Jones was in Toronto Tuesday to discuss the recent U.S. election. (Bill Pugliano/Getty)
A high-profile American political commentator says Canadians are flat-out wrong if they think a candidate like Donald Trump couldn't succeed here.
Van Jones, a CNN political contributor and former White House policy adviser, spoke with reporters on Tuesday evening about the U.S. election ahead of a Toronto event organized by the Broadbent Institute.
Since Trump's win, which Jones believes was driven in part by what he called a "whitelash," there has been a spike in hate crimes and hate speech across the U.S.
"It can find a home in your country, too, if you don't stand up to it," Jones said.
VIDEO
As for Trump, Jones said it's hard to tell what the president-elect will actually do once he's sworn in. He accused Trump of running one of the most irresponsible campaigns in history and said he hasn't done enough to condemn the white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups that have been emboldened by his win.
Trump did condemn an alt-right gathering in Washington that had featured Nazi salutes, during his meeting at the New York Times on Tuesday. 
Trump Waterboarding
How will Donald Trump lead once he's sworn in? Even Trump doesn't know, Jones says. (Evan Vucci/Associated Press)
Jones said he still believes the wider public won't back Trump's plans to deport millions of immigrants or stage a major crackdown against Muslims in the U.S.
Trump voters, he said, didn't sign up for the most extreme things Trump stands for. Jones said he believed millions of people who voted for Trump didn't actually like the candidate, but just couldn't bring themselves to vote for the Democrats.

Election fractured U.S., Jones says

"Most Americans right now are just heartbroken about the whole thing," Jones said, noting both major parties have major flaws — the Democrats for their elitism, while the Republican Party has become a safe place for bigots.
"The country is so divided over these two broken parties that nobody wants to go home for Thanksgiving dinner."
VIDEO
Jones also quashed speculation he'd run for the White House during the next federal election.
"I am not qualified to be president of the United States. Nor is the president-elect."
Jones was recently called a "star of the 2016 campaign" by the New York Times. He's also a civil rights activist and founded multiple social enterprises, including the Dream Corps, which promotes innovative policy solutions.
With files from The Canadian Press
The Source:http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/van-jones-toronto-1.3863185
Comment:
“I’ll be direct”… Fr, Vitaliano Papais

                               “It could happen here” …Van Jones

What do Van Jones and Fr, Vitaliano Papais have in common?

They are both direct men who use direct words.

Mr. Jones, a left wing American commentator, was recently in Toronto warning about arrogant Trudeau government behavior leading to a “whitelash”.  

Fr. Vitaliano, a respected parish priest, recently broke all church protocol. He wrote in the Corriere Canadese that the Trudeau government has rigged the system against Italian Canadians.

We can all see where this is going.

Sophie better start packing.

Richard Boraks, November 24 2016

From Bingo to Pay for Play

I’ve finally figured out one of modern civilization’s great mysteries:

Why, since 1993, has the Indian sub-continent and adjoining areas always managed to corral such a lion’s share of Canadian permanent residency visas?

Immigration programs come and go. But, no matter the program, the Indian sub-continent region consistently out scores European by significant margins.

The lop sided numbers have persisted for two decades. This despite:

  • The data based demand by Canadian Europeans for their relatives and workers far outweighing the needs of the South Asian communities. The visas go to the subcontinent. The illegal worker status  goes to Europeans

  • The European demand for Canadian visas has persisted for the past two decades  

  • Most immigrants from Asia do not bother staying in Canada. Ottawa is scared to disclose how many Canadian passports and potential claims on Canada’s social safety network are floating around Asia. Over 1 million is the correct number.

What happened in June 1993 was that Mike Malloy, an Ottawa Immigration official, came down to Glendon College and told the ,overwhelmingly Christian, assembled churches and NGO’s  ,that   “immigration bingo was over”. Mike told us that community groups (many based in church basements and thus the reference to bingo) would no longer have a say in immigration quotas.

The doors were slammed shut on any form of European lobbying for visas.   

Mike explained the logic of Ottawa’s rush to get away from the European community visa lobbying:  Communism had fallen. The European Union was strong. Computer technology was becoming the rage. Bureaucrats were tired of bending immigration quotas to suit community groups, overwhelmingly, European, white and Christian. The new world order of Immigration was descending. Everything would be fair and transparent.

Hallelujah.

By 1993, the bureaucrats were spending money to establish computer systems ensuring that immigration selection would now be a meritocracy run by professionals. The bureaucrats were determined that never again would there  be community interference , largely led from Toronto. The new visa selection system would be colour blind. It would be free of political interference .It would be run by the new electronic selection system.

Hallelujah.

So what happened?

Jean Chrétien is what happened.

Later in 1993 Chretien became Prime Minister.

Chrétien had no intention of allowing Mike’s meritocracy to stand in the way of making some money.

Mike was sent off to Syria.

Chretien encouraged his Immigration Ministers, and his Members of Parliament to operate wholesale “pay for play” immigration consultancy businesses out of their government offices.

Pay to play became so notorious that the Speaker of the House of Commons actually initiated the “Jim Karygiannis rule” formalizing Members of Parliament taking money for immigration services. MP’s were/are actually charging money for making representations to the Immigration Minister on behalf of constituents/clients. (One day back in the 1990’s, I bumped into Jim, a Member of Parliament, in an elevator at the Canadian visa office in Athens. He was busy running his tax payer subsidized immigration practice. I had to pay my own overhead. The taxpayer paid Jim’s expenses. He simply kept the profit. I always thought it funny that he asked me what I was doing there.)

The Karygiannis rule opened the door to the “pay for play” culture which has led to Asian consultants pretty much dictating immigration quotas for over 20 years.

Ministers, Members of Parliament, consultants and Asian political groups have shared, and are sharing millions of dollars for peddling visas in the subcontinent.

The auctioning off of our visa quotas was accompanied by Ottawa creating a new unconscionable, mandatory administrative layer of global pre visa selection. Canada’s overseas visa applications are now vetted by a private company from Mumbai, India.

The Mumbai company controlling our visa vetting system is VFS. Their web site is: www.vfsglobal.ca

I never understood why Canadians cannot not operate the visa vetting system. There is no acceptable explanation justifying Ottawa compromising our security by sole sourcing a private sector call centre operation in Mumbai. Shame.

So, it is now 2016. In summary:

  • The gatekeeper for Canadian  visas  is an entrepreneur from Mumbai

  • Immigration quotas are established by MPs who take money from Asian consultants and Asian commercial and political groups

  • The same groups, e.g. the Punjabis, who are big players in the visa quota game with MP’s are also serious players in assuring that MPs, mostly South Asians, control the nomination process.

  • There are several Trudeau appointed Punjabi senators, 16 Punjabi MP’s and 4 senior Punjabi cabinet ministers. The Punjabi reps, disciplined by organizations such as the World Sikh Organization, assure the ongoing control of quotas. The perfect system. Ottawa assures the supply. Chandigarh assures the demand.  

  • Italian and Portuguese MP’s will not engage in pay to play. Thus, their visa representations are ignored by Trudeau.

  • There are no Trudeau appointed Italian, Portuguese or Greek senators or Cabinet ministers.

So, there we have it:

European Church Basement Bingo Replaced by Asian Pay for Play

No meritocracy…. No transparency

No public policy consideration in establishing immigration quotas

Meaningless, crashing computer systems

Foreign political and commercial interests financed by Canadian MP’s operating visa cash registers in their offices

European Canadians squeezed out of the picture

The criminal code hovering above the entire mess


Time for a return to the church basements.

Richard Boraks, November 23 2016