Death near Quebec border highlights need for safe migration pathways: experts
MONTREAL — The recent death of a Montreal man from probable hypothermia as he tried to cross into the United States has exposed the dangers of irregular border crossings, which appear to be rising on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border.
The body of 44-year-old Fritznel Richard was found in a wooded area south of Montreal last week; he had been trying to reach family in the United States, Quebec provincial police said. Experts say his death highlights the need for Canadian and United States authorities to remove regulatory barriers to migration so people don’t need to use irregular crossings.
Poverty, economic instability and disruptions due to climate change are pushing an increasing number of people to seek security in places such as Canada and the United States, says France-Isabelle Langlois of Amnesty International Canada’s French-language division.
“This rise in inequality between the North and South prompts a rise in insecurity, in violence — that means that people are more pushed to find a place where their future and that of their children will be better,” she said in a recent phone interview.