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To: SSP who wrote (93572)10/12/2001 3:01:23 PM
From: Patsyw  Respond to of 150070
 
Way to go Canada, I hope the U.S. follows your lead.
TORONTO, Oct 12, 2001 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- Immigrants to Canada will get a
new plastic photo ID card instead of papers that are easily forged, the
government said Friday - the latest security measure since the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks on the United States.

Immigration officials also will have broader powers to detain and deport anyone
trying to enter the country illegally, Immigration Minister Elinor Caplan told a
news conference at the border crossing at Niagara Falls.

The tighter immigration measures follow earlier announcements this week that
Canada was spending $165 million to bolster security at airports, toughen
anti-terrorism laws and crack down on immigration fraud in response to the
attacks in New York and Washington.

Caplan said the new immigration card, called the Maple Leaf, will have
fraud-proof technology including laser imprinting and a magnetic strip. She
described it as tamper-proof and said she would recommend that it cost no more
than a passport - $40.

New immigrants will begin receiving the card by June 2002, and all immigrants
yet to gain full citizenship will have to apply for the new Maple Leaf card
within five years, Caplan said.

Tightening immigration procedures is sensitive in Canada, which welcomes more
than 200,000 newcomers a year under a policy to increase the population of 30
million to stimulate economic growth.

U.S. officials have criticized Canadian immigration and refugee laws as too lax,
citing the case of Ahmed Ressam, a failed refugee applicant from Algeria, who
was arrested in December 1999 while trying to cross the border into Washington
state with explosives in the trunk of his car.

Ressam was convicted this year on charges of plotting to bomb Los Angeles
International Airport during millennium celebrations.

Caplan said the measures announced Friday would let Canada maintain its
open-door policy with greater security.

"We know that Canada was built by immigration," she said. "We need those people
to come here and help us to build our country in the future. We want people who
are peace-loving, willing to work to keep this country as great as it is."

In addition, her department will hire 300 more immigration and customs officials
with authority to detain people for longer screening periods if they are
considered security threats, she said.

"Given the heightened state of alert since Sept. 11, it is reasonable to expect
an expanded but targeted use of detention for security reasons," she said.

Other measures announced this week include $60 million for airport security
including fingerprint scanners at major entry points and more border guards.

Later Friday, the government was scheduled to announce increased spending for
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

The tightened security and increased spending come after years of budget cuts
for the military and RCMP under successive governments headed by Prime Minister
Jean Chretien's Liberal Party.

Canada's decision to contribute navy ships, special force fighters and transport
planes to the U.S.-led military campaign against terrorism has increased concern
that it could be targeted by future terrorist attacks.


By TOM COHEN
Associated Press Writer

Copyright 2001 Associated Press, All rights reserved

-0-

APO Priority=r
APO Category=1101

KEYWORD: TORONTO
SUBJECT CODE: 1101

*** end of story ***