Iraq war resisters who fled to Canada ask Justin Trudeau to allow them to stay
Iraq war resisters who fled to Canada ask Justin Trudeau to allow them to stay
Years after crossing the border to avoid heading back to war, former US soldiers live in fear of being deported home to face potential jail time for desertion
Ashifa Kassam in Toronto
@ashifa_k
Tuesday 2 August 2016 07.30 EDT
Its been more than a decade since Joshua Key chose to cross into Canada rather than continue as a US soldier in the Iraq war. But, at times, he still feels as though hes fighting a war one he describes as a war against my post-traumatic stress disorder, a conflict against my contract with the military and a battle with the Canadian government.
He arrived in Canada in 2005 soon after Canadas then government declared it would not actively participate in the US-led war in Iraq following in the footsteps of the up to 90,000 Americans who sought refuge in Canada during the Vietnam war era.
But unlike those who poured into Canada in the 1960s and 70s, the estimated 200 Iraq war resisters who arrived decades later found little government support in their bid to stay in Canada. Years after crossing the border, the 15 or so known resisters who remain in Canada live lives coloured with uncertainty, the threat of being deported home to face potential jail time for desertion looming constantly over their new lives.
Now theyre calling on Justin Trudeau, Canadas prime minister, and his Liberal government to reverse years of government antagonism and allow them to stay in Canada permanently.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/aug/02/iraq-war-resisters-canada-trudeau-us-military