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Canada commits to accepting 10,000 more Syrian refugees

Newly-arrived Syrian refugees meet sponsors and relatives at the Armenian Community Centre in Toronto on Wednesday, December 16, 2015.
Newly-arrived Syrian refugees meet sponsors and relatives at the Armenian Community Centre in Toronto on Wednesday, December 16, 2015. Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press

OTTAWA – Immigration Minister John McCallum is loosening restrictions on the private sponsorship of Syrian refugees this year after a public outcry.

The Immigration Department will now process all applications for Syrians received as of Mar. 31 with an eye towards getting a further 10,000 to Canada by the end of this year or early 2017.

“We can’t go on to infinity, but we are doing the best we can to meet the demand,” McCallum said in an interview with The Canadian Press from Germany, where he is meeting immigration officials.

READ MORE: Liberals make new promises on Syrian refugee programs

Private groups were caught off guard when the government scaled back efforts to resettle Syrians after the Liberals achieved their goal of bringing in 25,000 people by the end of last month.

VIDEO GALLERY: Syrian refugees arriving in Canada

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In addition to cutting staff processing Syrian applications, the government decided to limit the number of applications it would accept this year and since the inventory already exceed that cap, it was unlikely anyone who submitted a file after Jan. 1 would see the refugee they wanted to sponsor arrive this year.

The move prompted frustration among private groups, many of whom didn’t start raising funds until after the Liberals unveiled their marquee Syrian program in November. It also raised questions about whether the Liberals were truly committed to refugee resettlement or had lost interest after meeting their target.

McCallum said the government remains committed to refugees, but has to manage the system in a responsible way.

READ MORE: Most Syrian refugees arrive in Canada healthy but challenges remain

He said the increased number of Syrians will see this year’s admissions jump even higher than the maximum 18,000 privately sponsored refugees Canada had intended to accept.

The roughly 10,000 applications for Syrians that will now be processed will not count against the global cap on applications, which remain in place.

The department will also do its best to ensure processing the Syrian cases won’t mean further delays for refugees from elsewhere, McCallum said.

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