Plan to bring grieving mother’s relatives to Halifax ‘moving quickly’
HALIFAX — Federal officials are closer to bringing as many as 10 relatives of a grieving Syrian refugee to Nova Scotia, as Halifax residents prepared to gather Saturday for the funeral of her seven children who died in a fast-moving house fire.
Halifax MP Andy Fillmore said Friday a number of applications were already being processed, and anonymous donors have offered to pay for expenses such as flights, lodging and groceries.
“It illustrates how incredibly warmly the community has come together to support this family. We can sense that the world is watching and is being reminded of what Canada’s role in the world is with regard to refugees and openness to immigration,” said Fillmore from Ottawa.
Kawthar Barho, whose badly burned husband’s condition has improved slightly, has told local politicians and religious leaders in Halifax that she wants to be reunited with family members living overseas because she has no other relatives in Canada.