Conservative MPs are calling on the federal government to do more to evict Iranian regime agents and officials from Canadian soil, amid hostilities in the Middle East and acts of violence on Canadian streets.
Tories said on March 9 they will table a motion in the House of Commons immigration committee calling on Ottawa to ensure individuals linked to Iran’s regime or Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) are swiftly removed from the country.
“Can the minister confirm that there are still 700 of them on Canadian soil and that he will do whatever it takes to remove them immediately and rid the country of these terrorists?” said Pierre Paul-Hus, an MP from Quebec. “Iranian Canadians are telling us that the presence of IRGC members on Canadian soil is a huge problem for their community.”
Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree replied that members of the IRGC are “facing consequences.”
“There are a number of members who are going through our process to be removed,” the minister added.
Anandasangaree said the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) reviewed 18,000 applications for inadmissibility. “We have opened over 170 investigations, and approximately 240 visas have been cancelled” by Immigration Canada on the grounds the individual was linked to the IRGC, he said.
Anandasangaree replied that CBSA is working “expeditiously” to remove members of the IRGC from Canada.
The CBSA told The Epoch Times that as of March 5, about 17,800 Iranian regime-related applications were reviewed for potential inadmissibility, with 239 visas cancelled by Immigration Canada. As for investigations, 174 were opened and 79 were concluded when it was found the applicant was not in Canada or was not a senior Iranian regime official.
The border agency says that so far only one senior Iranian official has been removed from Canada, while three are under deportation orders.
The Tory MPs calling for more action from Ottawa on the file have blamed the government’s immigration and public safety policies, and have linked the issue to acts of violence on Canadian streets.
The synagogue shootings took place in the days following the attack on Iran from a joint operation by the United States and Israel.
The Tory push to remove Iranian agents from Canada comes as Iran is under air attack by the United States and Israel.
On the first day of hostilities, Feb. 28, Prime Minister Mark Carney backed the strikes against Iran, saying diplomatic efforts had failed to rein in the regime. He later said he had taken this stance with “regret” and called for de-escalation.
Meanwhile, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said during question period on March 9 that Canada “supports all efforts to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons,” adding that “all parties have to comply with the rules of international law.”
Anand’s department has been coordinating efforts in recent days to get Canadians out of the region, as countries around Iran have been targeted by Iranian missile and drone attacks.
Global Affairs Canada said on March 10 that 4,300 Canadian citizens, permanent residents, and family members arrived in Canada from the Middle East from March 4 to March 8, while Ottawa facilitated the departure of 871 others from the region to a safe third country.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on March 9 he believes the war campaign is nearing its end, with his country and Israel’s militaries having “shot everything they need to shoot.”







