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#deportation to canada
if-you-fan-a-fire · 1 year
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“26 Gay Spanish “Mutineers” Land in Halifax Under Guard,” Montreal Star. November 8, 1932. Page 1. ==== HALIFAX, Nov. 8 - (CP) - Gay and “delighted with the feed," 28 Spaniards arrived in Halifax today on the steamer Magnhild from St. Pierre and joked about being sent home to Spain to face charges of mutiny. 
They had fared well since they left the Spanish trawler Euskalerria at St. Pierre, they said. According to a dispatch from the French possession, the 26 men and boys, comprising almost half the trawler's crew refused to work as a protest against rations they had received while fishing on the Grand Banks. 
They went ashore at St. Pierre and refused to return to the ship. The French authorities communicated with Spain and received word that the men must return. The order had no effect on the men and the trawler picked up two dozen natives of the Island to fill their places. 
The French authorities decided to deport the deserters and put them on the steamer Magnhild for Halifax. Arriving here today, they were locked up in the immigration detention quarters to await a liner for England. Thence they will he rent to San Sebastian, Spain to stand trial.
Some of the men spoke English and were quite talkative. They declared they had been overworked and underfed.
“We worked about 20 home a day and did not get sufficient bread to eat or water to drink,” said one of them. He said the “mutiny" consisted of leaving the ship at St. Pierre and refusing to return on board. 
Officers of the Magnhild said the men were not treated as prisoners and were easy to handle. They ate ravenously from the time they boarded the vessel until she reached Halifax.
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pixelglam · 2 months
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Hiking in the Swiss Alps 🏔️
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The 25-year-old man, who came to Canada in 2018 as an international student, and has since worked in Edmonton, Alberta as a nurse, ran out of options this year when his work visa expired and his application for refugee status was rejected. Uganda has become one of the most dangerous countries for LGBTQ+ people this year, with the introduction of its harsh Anti-Homosexuality Act. The act, which was signed into law in May, calls for the death penalty for certain same-sex activities, and has prompted a torrent of abuse against LGBTQ+ people in the country, from both citizens and police.
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Tagging @politicsofcanada @allthegeopolitics
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nando161mando · 2 months
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Speak-Out: Status for All, End Detentions, End Deportations
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sanyu-thewitch05 · 1 year
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Everyone at Tory Lanez:
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cryingforcrocodiles · 10 months
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AMERICAAAAAA, AMERICAAAAAAAAAAAA
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ppcbug · 3 days
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This man who has a good job pretended to be a student to access services from a food bank! Unfortunately such abuse isn’t uncommon to find there are videos of immigrants and international students alike teaching other foreigners how to scam services that are for in need Canadians! This is even more remarkable when you realize by law international students must show they have adequate financial support before coming here.
Such abuse should result in deportation!
#voteppc to hold these people accountable
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 9 months
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"DEPORTEE's RETURN MAY BE ALLOWED," Toronto Globe. July 21, 1933. Page 3. --- Welland Man Can Apply for Admission to United States ---- (Special Despatch to The Globe.) Welland, July 20. - Word Thursday from United States Immigration officials to Rev. Dr. T. H. Ibbott of Welland uncovers once again the deportation case of August Gabert in 1931 to his native land, Germany, after, Gabert had paid his son a visit in Detroit, only to find that the American Immigration officials would not allow him to re-enter Canada. After much correspondence with the Immigration Department at Washington, Rev. Dr. Ibbott, who is working on the case, received word Thursday that Mr. Gabert has been granted permission to reapply for admission to the United States after his deportation. Rev. Dr. Ibbott believes that Gabert will be successful in his efforts to be allowed to return to America.
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temusuitcase · 1 month
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In the 11th hour, the deportation order that would have sent a 25-year-old gay man back to Uganda was cancelled Friday. “The government stepped in, they intervened to cancel the removal, and they’ve offered my client a seven-month temporary resident permit along with an open work permit so he can pursue other options,” the man’s lawyer Michael Battista confirmed. “The battle isn’t over for him. He hasn’t been given permanent resident status. He’s been given the opportunity to file further applications next year when he becomes eligible for them.”
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Tagging @politicsofcanada @allthegeopolitics
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cyarsk52-20 · 7 months
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Let's just like... collectively, stop giving him a platform and just stop talking about him. Because he's pointless, it is very obvious that he is disgusting because nobody wants him. He can't grow up. Maybe that's why he's going after teenage girls? He's a fucking weirdo.
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rabbitcruiser · 9 months
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British governor Charles Lawrence and the Nova Scotia Council ordered the deportation of the Acadians on July 25, 1755.
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seat-safety-switch · 1 month
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I don't know if you've ever been to Paris before, but I recommend going. Normally, I would not have gone, but I made a really rich enemy on IRC and he spent a lot of money to have me kidnapped and brought to his home country. While I was there, I got to try a bunch of restaurants (they're hostage-takers, not barbarians) and came away impressed. Something was missing, though, and herein is my genius idea.
In Paris you can get any kind of food. Chinese, Vietnamese, Japanese, Thai: and it's all good. All of it. You literally can't find a bad restaurant. At one point, I walked into a convenience store and got a plate of one-Euro nachos that made me cry at the beauty of the arrangement.
Everyone around me was taking this for granted. Having lived there for years, their quality threshold had crept invisibly upwards until nothing could impress again. They needed something to re-calibrate their sense of truly bad food. That's where I came in. After I got kicked out of the country, I decided to come back with some investor support. I can burn cereal, usually by roasting it gently with a blowtorch on the top of an old gas can. Investors were easy to find.
Our first week of opening was tremendous. Hardened Parisians were discovering their first taste of truly incompetent food. The novelty of it all had captured them. There's just one problem, though: after making an entire lunch rush's first of poorly-cut toast in reheated canned soup, my cooking skills began to improve from sheer experience. The complaints began to change tone. You got too good, they cried, you're not the same bad chef we once loved. Again, I was deported.
I looked out the window of the plane as it left De Gaulle, staring down onto the beautiful streets of Paris. Down there, I imagined, real gourmets were now eating food out of trash cans out of desperation to recapture what they had experienced with me. If there is one nice thing to be said, I now have two Michelin Stars here in my homeland of Canada, where my consommé-and-grilled-cheese recipe is now so much better than most of our restaurants that it made the Prime Minister Herself come and spit in my face for ruining the economy, before awarding me an Order of Canada. It's not the same.
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