Find alternatives to harmful practice of jailing child migrants: report
OTTAWA — A new report by human rights researchers urges Canada to urgently find alternatives to locking up child migrants, saying the practice has a harmful and lasting effect on already vulnerable newcomers.
Canada has held hundreds of children — including some from Syria and other war-torn regions — in immigration detention in recent years in violation of global legal obligations, says the report by the University of Toronto’s international human rights program.
Researchers released the report, “No Life for a Child,” at a news conference Thursday.
The Canada Border Services Agency holds newcomers who are considered a flight risk or a danger to the public and those whose identities cannot be confirmed.


