S. Waziri Hassan
min
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How to get Canada Visa as a Sudanese refuge?

Canada is offering refuge to Sudanese citizens that were affected by the ongoing conflict.

Ottawa is offering a lifeline to people fleeing an escalating civil war in Sudan if they have relatives in Canada who agree to financially support them.

The immigration minister Marc Miller says the new humanitarian pathway will be for both Sudanese Citizens and other foreign citizens who lived in Sudan when conflict broke out in April of 2023.

This program will apply to people who are either children, grandchildren, patents, grandparents or siblings to a Canadian citizen or permanent residents. How to Contact Canadian Immigration?

The relatives have to agree to financially support them, though Ottawa has not said how much money this will require.

People must apply for the program and complete the typical security and biometric screening used for visa applicants, such as fingerprinting.

The dueling militias began a civil war in Sudan that has caused over five million people to flee, including many who were refugees from neighboring countries.

Armed conflicts in Sudan between the Rapid Support Forces, a paramilitary group, and the Sudanese Armed Forces have continued since April 15th of 2023. This has witnessed a lot of bloodshed and property loss in the capital Khartoum and the surrounding cities.

Since December of 2023, Wad Madani, Sudan’s second largest city, has witnessed widespread killing, maiming and detaining of civilians and attacks on hospitals and power plants.

Most of these actions were allegedly ethnically motivated. The UN High commissioner for human rights expressed concerns about these human rights violations and said that more than 200,000 people have been displaced in Wad Madani so far.

In April 2023, Canada launched a series of temporary immigration measures for Sudanese nationals since the outbreak of the armed conflict. Canada allocated over $160 million in humanitarian assistance funding to experienced partners in Sudan and her neighbors affected by the crisis.

 “Canada will continue to help those in need and uphold our humanitarian traditions as a country,” - Miller expressed deep concerns.

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