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2025 加拿大 5亿 驱逐移民

(2025-10-22 05:00:04) 下一个

驱逐出境预算曝光,谁才是真正的买单者 │ 加拿大移民 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_SHgfQUtHE

加拿大纪事 2025年10月6日

渥太华的巨额支出引发了全国的关注。加拿大政府刚刚拨款超过5亿美元,用于加强驱逐出境、边境执法和遣返工作——这是多年来最大的驱逐出境预算。但这笔钱究竟花在了哪里?更重要的是,谁来买单?

在本期加拿大移民 2025 更新中,我们将揭秘这笔创纪录的5亿美元驱逐出境预算背后的真相——它如何影响纳税人、移民以及加拿大在全球的声誉。

从新的成本回收费到扩大的加拿大边境服务局 (CBSA) 拘留设施,这段视频揭示了政府计划如何根据其新的边境计划管理执法、技术和遣返工作。

我们还将揭秘“可能决定打击行动命运的隐藏变量——加拿大的数字弱点”。

移民系统的这一关键环节可能决定渥太华这项大规模投资的成败。

在本视频中,您将了解:

• 加拿大为何斥资 5 亿美元用于驱逐出境和边境行动
• 新的驱逐出境费对移民和逾期居留签证持有者意味着什么
• 此次打击行动如何影响加拿大工作许可、签证续签和移民处理时间
• 加拿大移民系统内部的数字化弱点
• 纳税人为何现在间接承担驱逐出境和执法成本
• 敬请期待——您将了解科技如何成就或毁掉渥太华 2025 年移民计划。
<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>
创纪录的预算曝光。渥太华斥资 5 亿美元加强驱逐出境打击行动。欢迎回到《加拿大纪事报》。加拿大的移民系统正面临前所未有的压力,渥太华正以资金、权力和一项引发全国热议的计划来应对。加拿大政府斥资五亿美元,推动近代史上规模最大的驱逐出境行动之一。但这笔钱究竟流向何处?谁会受到影响?这笔巨额预算会永远改变加拿大移民法的执行方式吗?在今天的视频中,我们将揭示这笔创纪录的支出将如何影响纳税人、新移民以及加拿大在世界舞台上的声誉。你将看到
这种转变将如何重塑边境运营,以及为什么这不仅仅关乎执法,还关乎效率、技术和控制。请耐心观看视频,我们将揭示可能决定此次驱逐行动命运的隐藏变量——加拿大的数字弱点。它可能会成就或毁掉渥太华耗资五亿美元的计划。如果你关心这些数字背后的真相,请务必订阅并打开通知,这样你就不会错过任何更新。让我们开始吧。加拿大移民和庇护系统的压力
已经达到了临界点。积压案件
不断增加,执法团队
不堪重负,政治压力也越来越大。渥太华的答案是将
数亿美元投入到
驱逐出境、拘留和边境行动中。这是多年来最大的
执法预算。但这五亿美元究竟能买到什么?谁来承担这些费用?加拿大的
移民系统几十年前设计时,
只处理少量案件。如今,它面临着
前所未有的大量寻求庇护者、
临时外国工人和非法入境者。结果,整个流程充斥着上诉和行政延误。渥太华的解决方案是扩大加拿大边境服务局的规模,
旨在遏制违规行为,加快遣返速度,并从被驱逐者身上收回部分成本。但仅靠资金就能解决问题吗?还是只会暴露更深层次的缺陷?五亿美元究竟意味着什么?
根据加拿大边境服务局(AY)2.25-26部门计划,边境执法项目将获得约5.13亿加元,高于两年前的3.81亿加元。这是AY历史上最大的一笔拨款,标志着其向强化执法和加快遣返速度的重大转变。这笔资金是渥太华更广泛的边境计划的一部分,该计划旨在实现安全现代化、改进情报系统并扩大拘留能力。并非每一美元都直接用于驱逐出境。但这些投资加在一起,加强了使遣返成为可能的基础设施。从调查、听证会到最终的回国航班。官员们所说的5亿加元,指的是维护整个执法生态系统的总成本。新的遣返费用将于
2025年4月开始。加拿大边境服务局
将自1993年以来首次全面改革其遣返成本回收系统。
每宗案件约1,500加元的旧固定费用将被
两级费用取代。陪同遣返,即
官员陪同个人,
费用约为12,800加元。
无人陪同遣返,即个人
独自旅行,费用将超过
3,800加元。
如果有人无力支付,政府
将承担费用并记录欠款,
这可能会阻止其未来再次入境。
2024年,收回的欠款不到50万加元。
与总数相比微不足道所有费用。渥太华希望提高收费能够阻止逾期居留,并减轻纳税人的负担。驱逐出境
费用高昂。其中包括航班、
文件准备、护送和拘留
时间。官员们认为,收费更接近真实成本可以促进公平,
但批评人士表示,这会惩罚那些已经在苦苦挣扎的弱势群体。法律障碍和运营挑战。即使资金创纪录,
遣返也不可能一蹴而就。
遣返必须遵守加拿大法律和国际法,在速度和正当程序之间取得平衡。加拿大边境服务局专注于
涉及严重犯罪、难民申请失败以及
可强制执行的遣返令的案件。每个人
仍然拥有权利,如果他们担心受到迫害,可以进行遣返前风险评估,可以选择向
联邦法院或移民上诉部门上诉,
并可能出于人道主义原因获得延期。遣返还取决于目的地国的合作。一些政府拒绝
签发旅行证件,导致人们
多年来处于法律困境。拘留容量
又增加了另一个挑战。包括不列颠哥伦比亚省和新斯科舍省在内的几个省份终止了允许被拘留者进入省级监狱的协议。
渥太华此后扩建了自己的拘留设施,包括在魁北克省桑坦德伦市建立一个新的移民拘留中心。
即使有了新的资金,遣返工作也仍然以外交和法律的步伐进行,而不是政治。这会带来人文和政治的
后果。每一次遣返背后都有一段
人性化的故事。许多受影响的人是
低收入工人、学生和
在加拿大居住多年的
被拒绝的寻求庇护者。人权倡导者警告说,不断上涨的成本和更快的遣返速度将对这些群体造成最严重的打击。新的费用可能会使他们
进一步陷入债务或绝望之中。渥太华坚称驱逐令只针对那些
没有合法居留权的人,但批评人士认为,严厉的执法可能会损害加拿大的人道主义形象。加拿大仍然受条约约束,这些条约禁止将任何人遣返到
他们面临迫害或酷刑的地方,而错误可能会造成
改变人生的后果。政治上,政府面临着严峻的考验。在选民对住房和公共服务压力感到沮丧的情况下,政府必须展现同情心,同时证明对边境的控制。这种做法旨在展现强硬态度,同时又不放弃加拿大的人道主义价值观。但一次
错误的驱逐令或一次引人注目的错误都可能引发公众的愤怒。
随着人数的增加,定义的不断变化,
驱逐令的数量正在增加,尽管数据因统计方式而异。2025 年 2 月的一份报告记录了
2024 年的驱逐令数量为 7,300 起,比上一年增加了 8%,为十年来的最高水平。另一份政府更新报告称,2024年1月至10月期间,超过1.4万名不准入境的外国人被遣返。两份报告都准确无误。第一份报告统计了根据加拿大移民法正式遣返的人数,而第二份报告则包括自愿遣返和行政遣返。两者传递的信息相同。加拿大正在加大执法力度,而新的资金将确保执法力度持续加强。问责制和透明度至关重要。由于涉及如此多的资金,公众希望获得有效使用的证据。有多少遣返令真正得到执行?有多少新增收入被收回?有多少案件因法律或外交延误而停滞?加拿大边境服务局表示,计划对其系统进行现代化升级,改进文件记录,并与外国政府更紧密地合作,以加快遣返速度。该局还在投资建设更人性化的拘留设施,并招聘更多员工来管理工作量。这项创纪录的预算不仅仅关乎航班和护送,还关乎重建整个边境执法框架。感谢您一直关注我们。我们感谢您抽出时间阅读,并希望这些信息对您有所帮助。
加拿大的数字弱点
可能决定此次打击行动的命运。资金可以增强能力,但技术才能推动成功。渥太华耗资五亿美元的打击行动的结果,
可能取决于一个被忽视的因素。
数字协调。多年来,
执法机构一直在努力应对数据库碎片化和文件传输缓慢的问题。加拿大边境服务局、加拿大移民、难民和公民部以及加拿大移民和难民委员会之间的信息共享仍然过时且效率低下。新的预算包括升级这些系统的资金,但专家警告说,如果没有真正的整合,数百万美元可能会被浪费在追查纸质记录上。更智能的分析
可以识别哪些案件最容易
被移除,并减少不必要的
拘留时间。数字签到和
生物识别验证可以取代
部分实体拘留,从而节省成本并
保护权利。但如果实施不力,
这些工具可能会引发隐私担忧,
并削弱公众信任。如果
渥太华真心希望取得成果,它不仅必须投资人力,还必须投资于
智能系统,使
执法速度更快、更公平,以及更负责任的前进道路。构建一个
更智能的系统。真正的问题不仅仅是成本,而是协调。为了使
这份创纪录的预算行之有效,加拿大
必须:第一,优先考虑基于数据的遣返,以专注于能够有效解决的案件。第二,加强各机构、法院和外国政府之间的合作。第三,在威慑力和对低收入移民的公平性之间取得平衡。
第四,公布透明的绩效结果,以维护问责制。
第五,投资建设维护加拿大价值观的人道联邦设施。
如果执行得当,这可以
将一个过时的系统转变为一个积极主动、透明的系统。如果执行不力,它就有可能成为另一个昂贵的
官僚主义实验。加拿大创纪录的
执法计划标志着一个转折点。
五亿美元用于证明移民法仍然有效。
它能否恢复控制力还是
引发争议,将取决于
渥太华如何平衡秩序和同情心。加拿大耗资五亿加元的执法行动不仅仅是一个预算问题,更是对优先事项和国家价值观的考验。政府表示,新的资金将使执法系统更快、更公平,但也引发了关于透明度和人性化的严峻问题。

Deportation Budget EXPOSED & Who Really Pays for It │ Canada Immigration 2025

Canada Chronicles 2025年10月6日

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_SHgfQUtHE

Ottawa’s spending spree has raised eyebrows across the country. The Canadian government just allocated over half a billion dollars to strengthen deportations, border enforcement, and removals — the largest deportation budget in years. But where is that money really going? And more importantly, who’s paying for it?

In this Canada Immigration 2025 update, we break down the truth behind this record $500 million deportation budget — how it impacts taxpayers, immigrants, and Canada’s reputation worldwide.

From new cost-recovery fees to expanded CBSA detention facilities, this video reveals how the government plans to manage enforcement, technology, and removals under its new Border Plan.

We’ll also uncover “The Hidden Variable That Could Decide the Crackdown’s Fate — Canada’s Digital Weak Spot.”

This crucial part of the system could determine whether Ottawa’s massive investment succeeds or fails.

In this video, you’ll learn:

• Why Canada is spending $500 million on deportations and border operations

• What new removal fees mean for immigrants and overstayed visa holders

• How this crackdown affects Canada work permit, visa renewal, and immigration processing times

• The digital weaknesses inside Canada’s immigration system

• Why taxpayers are now indirectly funding deportation and enforcement costs

• Stay tuned until the end — you’ll want to hear how technology could make or break Ottawa’s 2025 immigration plan.

<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>

Record budget exposed. Ottawa spends half a billion to power deportation crackdown. Welcome back to Canada Chronicles. Canada's immigration system is under more pressure than ever, and Ottawa is responding with money, power, and a plan that's sparking nationwide debate. The government is spending half a billion dollars to fuel one of the biggest deportation crackdowns in recent history. But where is that money really going? Who will feel the impact? And could this massive budget change the way Canada enforces its immigration laws forever? In today's video, we'll uncover how this record spending affects taxpayers, newcomers, and the country's reputation on the world stage. You'll

see how this shift could reshape border operations and why it's not just about enforcement. It's about efficiency, technology, and control. Stay until the end as we reveal the hidden variable that could decide the crackdown's fate, Canada's digital weak spot. It could make or break Ottawa's half billion dollar plan. If you care about what's really happening behind the numbers, make sure to subscribe and turn on notifications so you never miss an update. Let's get started. The strain on

Canada's immigration and asylum system

has reached a breaking point. Backlogs

are swelling, enforcement teams are

overwhelmed, and political pressure is

growing. Ottawa's answer is to channel

hundreds of millions of dollars into

deportation, detention, and border

operations. This is the largest

enforcement budget in years. But what

does half a billion dollars actually buy

and who carries the cost? Canada's

system was designed decades ago for

smaller case loads. Today, it faces

unprecedented numbers of asylum seekers,

temporary foreign workers, and irregular

entrance. The result is a process

clogged with appeals and administrative

delays. Ottawa's solution is to expand

the Canada Border Services Agency,

aiming to deter violations, accelerate

removals, and recover some costs from

deportes. But can money alone fix the

problem, or will it simply expose deeper

flaws? What half a billion really means?

According to the Canada Border Services

AY's 2,25-26

departmental plan, the border

enforcement program will receive about

513 million, up from $381 million just 2

years ago. It's the largest allocation

in the AY's history and signals a major

shift towards stronger enforcement and

faster removals. This funding is part of

Ottawa's broader border plan designed to

modernize security, improve intelligence

systems, and expand detention capacity.

Not every dollar goes directly to

deportations. But together, these

investments strengthen the

infrastructure that makes removals

possible. From investigations and

hearings to the final flight home. When

officials call it half a billion

dollars, they mean the total cost of

maintaining an entire enforcement

ecosystem. The new removal fees starting

April 2025. The Canada Border Services

Agency will overhaul its cost recovery

system for removals for the first time

since 1993. The old flat rate of about

$1,500 per case is being replaced with

two tiers. Escorted removals, when

officers accompany the individual, will

cost around $12,800.

Unescorted removals, where the person

travels independently, will exceed

$3,800.

If someone cannot pay, the government

covers the cost and records the debt,

which can block future re-entry. In

2024, less than $500,000 was recovered.

Tiny compared to total expenses. Ottawa

hopes higher fees will deter overstays

and reduce taxpayer burden. Deportations

are costly. They involve flights,

documentation, escorts, and detention

time. Officials argue that charging

closer to true cost promotes fairness,

but critics say it punishes vulnerable

people already struggling to stay

afloat. Legal barriers and operational

challenges. Even with record funding,

removals can't happen overnight.

Deportations must comply with Canadian

and international law, balancing speed

with due process. The Canada Border

Services Agency focuses on cases

involving serious criminality, failed

refugee claimants, and those under

enforcable removal orders. Each

individual still has rights, a pre-

removal risk assessment if they fear

persecution, the option to appeal before

the federal court or immigration appeal

division, and possible deferrals for

humanitarian reasons. Removals also

depend on cooperation from destination

countries. Some governments refuse to

issue travel documents, leaving people

in legal limbo for years. Detention

capacity adds another challenge. Several

provinces, including British Columbia

and Nova Scotia, ended agreements

allowing detainees in provincial jails.

Ottawa has since expanded its own

facilities, including a new immigration

holding center in Santan DeLen, Quebec.

Even with new funding, removals move at

the pace of diplomacy and law, not

politics. The human and political

fallout. Behind every deportation is a

human story. Many affected are

low-income workers, students, and

rejected asylum seekers who have lived

in Canada for years. Human rights

advocates warned that rising costs and

faster removals will hit these groups

hardest. The new fees could push them

further into debt or desperation. Ottawa

insists deportations target only those

with no legal right to remain, but

critics argue that harsh enforcement

could tarnish Canada's humanitarian

image. The country remains bound by

treaties that forbid returning anyone to

places where they face persecution or

torture and mistakes can have

lifealtering consequences. Politically,

the government faces a tight rope. It

must appear compassionate while proving

control of the border amid voter

frustration over housing and public

service pressures. The approach is meant

to project toughness without abandoning

Canada's humanitarian values. But one

wrongful deportation or high-profile

error could ignite public outrage.

Rising numbers, shifting definitions,

deportations are increasing, though the

data varies depending on how it's

counted. A February 2025 report recorded

7,300 deportations in 2024, an 8% rise

from the previous year, the highest in a

decade. Another government update stated

that more than 14,000 inadmissible

foreign nationals were removed between

January and October 2024. Both are

correct. The first counts formal

deportations under Canadian immigration

law while the second includes voluntary

and administrative removals. The message

is the same. Canada is ramping up

enforcement and the new funding ensures

that pace continues. Accountability and

transparency. With so much money at

stake, the public wants proof that it's

being spent effectively. How many

removal orders are actually enforced?

How much of the new revenue is

recovered? And how many cases stall

because of legal or diplomatic delays?

The Canada Border Services Agency says

it plans to modernize its systems,

improve documentation, and work more

closely with foreign governments to

accelerate returns. It's also investing

in more humane detention facilities and

hiring additional staff to manage the

workload. This record budget isn't just

about flights and escorts. It's about

rebuilding the entire framework of

border enforcement. Thanks for staying

with us this far. We appreciate your

time and hope you're finding this

information valuable.

The hidden variable that could decide

the crackdown's fate, Canada's digital

weak spot. Money builds capacity, but

technology drives success. The outcome

of Ottawa's halfbillion dollar crackdown

may depend on one overlooked factor.

Digital coordination. For years,

enforcement agencies have struggled with

fragmented databases and slow file

transfers. Information sharing between

the Canada Border Services Agency,

Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship

Canada, and the Immigration and Refugee

Board of Canada remains outdated and

inefficient. The new budget includes

funding to upgrade these systems, but

experts warn that without real

integration, millions could be wasted

chasing paper trails. Smarter analytics

could identify which cases are easiest

to remove and reduce unnecessary

detention time. Digital check-ins and

biometric verification could replace

some physical custody, saving costs and

protecting rights. But if implemented

poorly, these tools could raise privacy

concerns and erode public trust. If

Ottawa truly wants results, it must

invest not only in manpower, but in

intelligent systems that make

enforcement faster, fairer, and more

accountable path forward. Building a

smarter system. The real issue isn't

just cost. It's coordination. To make

this record budget effective, Canada

must one, prioritize datadriven removals

to focus on cases that can be resolved

efficiently. Two, improve cooperation

between agencies, courts, and foreign

governments. Three, balance deterrence

with fairness for low-income migrants.

Four, publish transparent performance

results to maintain accountability.

Five, invest in humane federal

facilities that uphold Canadian values.

If executed properly, this could

transform an outdated system into one

that's proactive and transparent. If

not, it risks becoming another expensive

bureaucratic experiment. Canada's record

enforcement plan marks a turning point.

Half a billion dollars devoted to

proving that immigration laws still have

power. Whether it restores control or

sparks controversy will depend on how

Ottawa manages the balance between order

and compassion. Canada's half billion

dollar enforcement push is more than a

budget story. It's a test of priorities

and national values. The government says

the new funding will make the system

faster and fairer, but it also raises

tough questions about transparency and humanity. 

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