Lawyer calls on Canada to speed up visa approvals as situation worsens in Gaza
ST. JOHN’S — A Toronto immigration lawyer says family members of Canadians are dying in Gaza as the federal immigration department drags it heels approving visas through a special program launched in 2024.
Debbie Rachlis said Canada must speed up the approval process for the temporary special measures visa it is offering to members of Palestinian Canadians’ families who are trying to flee the violence in Gaza.
Rachlis represents dozens of applicants to the program and said she is involved with “at least five cases” in which people have died waiting for word on their visa. She lobbied for the special measures program as a member of the Gaza Family Reunification Project.
“We are all aware of many, many situations where people who were waiting for visas to come to Canada have died and have been killed,” Rachlis said in a recent interview. That includes people who have died of starvation, or injuries from bombings, and people who have been killed while lining up to get rations, she said.


