Refugee claimants coming to Canada through the United States not new
MONTREAL — One spring morning, Alfredo Rivas and his wife, who was seven months pregnant, grabbed the small bags containing their remaining belongings and headed north to Canada, a place they’d never seen.
A week earlier, they’d decided to leave New York City amid worries the U.S. president’s promise to crack down on illegal immigration would put them at risk of being deported back to wartorn El Salvador.
It’s a story that has recently become familiar to Canadians as the country has seen a rise in the number of refugee claimants crossing its southern borders — a phenomenon some have linked with rising anti-immigrant rhetoric and the election of U.S. President Donald Trump.
Only, Rivas’ journey didn’t happen in recent months, and the president whose policies he was fleeing was Ronald Reagan, not Trump.


