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Migrants stopped trying to cross Canadian border in subzero temps
Migrants stopped trying to cross Canadian border in subzero temps

Yahoo

time10-02-2025

  • Yahoo

Migrants stopped trying to cross Canadian border in subzero temps

(NewsNation) — More than a dozen migrants, including children, were caught attempting to cross into Canada in subzero temperatures, officials reported. Police in Alberta stopped four adults and five children from Venezuela, who were struggling through the snow in -22 F weather, The Guardian reports. Canadian Police Assistant Commissioner Lisa Moreland said the group was found in 'incredibly cold' conditions, putting their lives at risk. Mexico has received nearly 11K deportees since Jan. 20 A second group, six adults from Jordan, Sudan, Chad, and Mauritius, was located near Manitoba's border in a dense forest. Thermal cameras on police planes helped locate them. Moreland noted in both cases the migrants were dressed inadequately for the extreme cold and urged them to avoid such dangerous border crossings, which often end in tragedy. 'The people might have succumbed to a heartbreaking situation similar to the freezing death of the Patel family,' Moreland said, referencing the infamous 2022 case in which an Indian migrant family — two parents and their 11-year-old daughter — froze to death while trying to make the trek. The latest incident follows the extradition of a Canadian man to New York on human smuggling charges related to the death of a pregnant Mexican woman. Ana Vasquez-Flores was found in the Great Chazy River in December 2023 after being lost in a failed illegal crossing. Vasquez-Flores' death came amid a surge of people crossing into New York and New England from Canada. The incident became an example of the perils migrants face trekking through the wooded and often snowy landscape along the U.S.-Canada border. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

One dead and 15 in custody after RCMP respond to recent Prairies border crossings
One dead and 15 in custody after RCMP respond to recent Prairies border crossings

CBC

time06-02-2025

  • CBC

One dead and 15 in custody after RCMP respond to recent Prairies border crossings

The RCMP have released details on three incidents along the Canada-U.S. border officers responded to in recent weeks. The incidents involved 16 attempted border crossings and one death. Police held a news conference in Edmonton on Wednesday to provide information about two border crossings in Coutts, Alta., earlier this week, and one crossing 15 kilometres east of Emerson, Man., a few weeks earlier. On Tuesday morning, a man crossing the border into Coutts was referred to a secondary inspection area, from which he fled. After the driver was located near Raymond, Alta., about 80 kilometres north of Coutts, he kept driving north to Lethbridge, before heading back to Raymond where he was seen holding a gun, police said. RCMP then used a tire deflation device to stop the man's vehicle south of Milk River, Alta., close to where the chase began in Coutts. The man then fled on foot, where he was pursued by police. During the pursuit, the man shot himself and was pronounced dead at the scene. The Alberta Serious Incident Response Team is now investigating the incident, police said. The day before, on Monday morning, RCMP were notified by the U.S. Border Patrol about a potential crossing near Coutts. Officers found a large group of people, four adults and five children, who were travelling on foot in bitterly cold weather. The nine people were arrested under the Customs Act and handed over to the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA). Officers also discussed a Jan. 14 crossing near Emerson, Man., where an RCMP border patrol plane equipped with thermal imaging located a group of six people and directed ground units to the location. Police on the ground searched the nearby woods where the group had fled and arrested them without incident. The six people were handed over to CBSA custody. In this case, police noted that the people found crossing the border were not dressed for the cold winter weather. In all three of the incidents, RCMP said the weather ranged between –20 and –30 C, without accounting for wind chill. Assistant commissioner Lisa Moreland, the RCMP's regional commander of federal policing in the Northwest region, noted the danger faced by people illegally crossing the border from the U.S. into Canada. "To anyone who is thinking about crossing the border, don't. You are putting your life at risk and you should not attempt under any circumstances," Moreland said on Wednesday. The police announcement came just days after increased security at the Canada-U.S. border played a part in delaying announced tariffs between the two countries. On Monday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reiterated the country's intent to move forward with a previously announced $1.3-billion border security plan. The suite of new measures includes outfitting the RCMP with helicopters, drones and mobile surveillance towers, and creating a new "Canada-U.S. Joint Strike Force" targeting organized crime. On the same day, previously announced U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods were delayed for a month. Border security has been a hot-button issue in recent months as U.S. President Donald Trump has criticized the flow of illegal migrants and fentanyl from Canada into the U.S. But the incidents the RCMP discussed on Wednesday involved irregular border crossings moving in the other direction. Police added that none of the three border crossings discussed on Wednesday involved fentanyl.

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