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in his own words

Immigration review board: Weeding out evil family men everywhere

Canada's Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) is not listed as an example in the dictionary under "nuanced." And maybe Canadians feel safer for having the IRB toss out people who make much better neighbours than the drunken louts who party till all hours on the weekend and puke up their Frosh Week activities in the flower bed.

But geez, you know, I wish they would take a slightly harder look, because it's becoming all too clear to me that Canada's refugee system really has no interest in adding upstanding citizens to the country who are precisely who we should promote. If Canada could send out a flyer to potential refugees with examples of who we desire, Jose Figueroa, living in Langley with his wife and three kids, would be the poster boy for the campaign.

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Columnists

El Salvador documentary digs into country's pain and hope

Return to El Salvador is essentially a call to arms, in the best sense, to the world to not forget this hard-scrabble Central American nation.

Return to El Salvador is essentially a call to arms, in the best sense, to the world to not forget this hard-scrabble Central American nation whose civil war, seemingly continued long after peace was negotiated in 1992.

The film, created with the One Horizon Foundation, is well-shot and contains some searing elements that will keep your eyes on the screen. It is more of a community activist film than a documentary. Of note is that it bears occasional narration by the peerless Martin Sheen -- long a union activist and all-round humanist. (When Sheen and his son Emilio Estevez were in Toronto for the film festival in September, they walked the picket lines with striking hotel workers).

Weekly Diaspora: How bad U.S.-Latin American policy fuels unauthorized immigration

| April 21, 2011
Migrant Matters

Jose Figueroa and the human cost of Canada's refugee laws

April 13, 2011
| Why has the Canadian government recently chosen to change their mind and label the FMLN as a terrorist group? What does Jose's deportation order mean for the Figueroa family? For Canadians?

56:08 minutes (51.39 MB)

Revolution in El Salvador

Jun 17 2009 - 3:17pm
Jun 20 2009 - 3:17pm

Location

Toronto Free Gallery
1277 Bloor St West just east of Lansdowne
Toronto, ON
Canada
Phone: 416-913-0461
43° 39' 30.33" N, 79° 26' 32.4204" W

Opening reception: Friday June 19, 7-10pm

2009 has been an historic year for the Left in El Salvador. The January 18 municipal elections saw the FMLN win their first majority of seats in the Legislative Assembly and the number of mayors increase by more than 60%. Building on that success, on March 15, Salvadorans elected Mauricio Funes of the FMLN as the new president, breaking the right wing’s 20 year reign.

Contact name: 
Aaron
Contact email: 

Latin America's 'pink tide' spreads to El Salvador

Sunday was voting day in El Salvador, with Mauricio Funes becoming the first leftist President in the country's history. (Photo: http://indybay.org/)

Related rabble.ca story:

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