Strong, proud and free-riding
Canadians like to see themselves as global benefactors, but in fact they have been pinching pennies on aid and defence
WHEN heart-rending images flashed across the world of Alan Kurdi, a three-year-old from Syria who drowned off the Turkish coast, people everywhere were appalled. But the pang of conscience was especially acute in Canada.
That was because Alan, his five-year-old brother, Galib, and their mother, Rehan, all of whom perished, might possibly be alive now had it not been for a tightening in Canadian immigration policy. The boys’ aunt, who has lived in Vancouver for 20 years, had been trying to secure entry for her two brothers and their families. That was a very painful thought for a country which rightly or wrongly loves to think of itself as being a “helpful fixer” of the world’s problems.
This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline "Strong, proud and free-riding"
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