The US and Canada reach a northern border immigration deal; the US launches retaliatory strikes against Iran in Syria. Tonight's Sentences was written by Jariel Arvin. |
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The US-Canada plan to reject asylum seekers |
Kenny Holston/AFP via Getty Images |
- Friday, the US and Canada reached a deal that would expel asylum seekers who arrive at their borders through unofficial points of entry. [Los Angeles Times / Hamed Aleaziz and Erin B. Logan]
- The agreement expands 2004's Safe Third Country Agreement, which requires refugees arriving at formal points of entry to file asylum claims in the first "safe" country they arrive in. [BBC / Nadine Yousif and Madeline Halpert]
- Under the new rule, that means asylum seekers who travel through the US to Canada will be sent back to the US, and those who try to come south from Canada will be sent back north. [NBC News / Julia Ainsley and Monica Alba]
- The policy change follows a record number of crossings in both directions along the northern US border. Last year, 40,000 people used Roxham Road, a path connecting New York to Quebec. [Reuters / Anna Mehler Paperny and Ted Hesson]
- As a part of the agreement, Canada will also accept and resettle 15,000 migrants fleeing humanitarian crises elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere. [CBS News / Camilo Montoya-Galvez]
- The move comes as President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau face pressure from conservatives to beef up their response to immigration. [Vox / Li Zhou]
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The US and Iran exchange strikes in Syria |
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A judge on Wednesday blocked Wyoming's abortion ban, citing a 2012 amendment Republicans passed to block the Affordable Care Act. [Vox / Ian Millhiser] |
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"The numbers are too low. We had 40,000 cross just in the past year — 15,000 is a low number and just from one part of the world, the Western Hemisphere." |
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This year's weird Winter Olympics were overshadowed by politics, Covid-19, and the threat of war. But as NPR's Tom Goldman explains, the biggest scandals were still about the sports. |
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