Canada is partnering with other parts of the world.

Singh demands Afghan interpreters' families be allowed into Canada as Taliban surges
Singh says the resettlement program needs to be expanded.
Canada is partnering with other parts of the world.
OTTAWA — Immigration Minister Marco Mendocino says there will be a new path to Canada for refugees who fear persecution because of their defence of human rights.
The new stream will include anyone facing persecution for advocating or defending human rights with a special emphasis on journalists, women and advocates for LGBTQ and two-spirit people.
Mendocino says we live in a world where human rights and democracy are "under siege."
He says most people think of refugees who are displaced from their homelands by conflict and war, but those who bear witness to those tragedies, or advocate for human rights, can also risk arrest, torture and death.
Canada's new stream will be open to up to 250 human-rights defenders a year, including members of their families.
Canada is partnering with the United Nations Refugee Agency and international organizations such as Front Line Defenders and ProtectDefenders.eu, which specialize in aiding people who face threats because of their work to defend rights around the world.
The Canadian Press
Singh says the resettlement program needs to be expanded.
The Sipekne'katik First Nation continue to face abuse in Nova Scotia.
Afghan refugees who risked their lives to support Canada are being flown into our country. Mendicino says the circumstances in Afghanistan are urgent and volatile. Former Afghan interpreters are calling on Canada to expand their program.