Canada closes the door on polygamous immigrants

Updated 08 November 2014
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Canada closes the door on polygamous immigrants

OTTAWA: Canada’s Immigration Minister Chris Alexander has unveiled plans to ban entry to migrants who practice polygamy and what he termed “barbaric cultural practices.”
The move follows a spate of so-called “honor” killings over the past decade involving immigrant families from the Middle East and South Asia.
“We are strengthening our laws to protect Canadians and newcomers to Canada from barbaric cultural practices,” Alexander said in a statement.
“We are sending a strong message to those in Canada and those who wish to come to Canada that we will not tolerate cultural traditions in Canada that deprive individuals of their human rights.”
The sweeping changes to Canada’s immigration act would also prohibit forced marriages, set a minimum age for marriage at 16 and limit possible defenses in “honor” killings and many spousal murders.
In “honor” killings, carried out to protect what is seen as family pride, reasons for disapproval can include having relationships outside of one’s caste or religion.
In May, a court ordered the mother and uncle of a Canadian woman allegedly killed overseas over her secret marriage to a poor rickshaw driver to be extradited to India to face prosecution for murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the 14-year-old case.
In another case, the father and brother of a 16-year-old girl pleaded guilty in 2010 to murdering her for disobeying her father, including refusing to wear a hijab. The family had immigrated from Pakistan.


French Culture Minister Dati quits to focus on run for Paris mayor

Updated 6 sec ago
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French Culture Minister Dati quits to focus on run for Paris mayor

  • Dati sent her resignation letter to President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday
  • Macron’s office said he accepted the resignation

PARIS: French Culture Minister Rachida Dati quit her post on Wednesday to focus on her candidacy for Paris mayor in an election scheduled for March 15.
She sent her resignation letter to President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday, she said in an ⁠interview with TV ⁠station BFMTV.
Macron’s office said he accepted the resignation.
“The head of state thanked her for the useful action she ⁠has carried out in service to the French people over the past two years and offered her his full support in the fight she is waging,” the office said.
Dati, who most recently oversaw the change at the ⁠helm ⁠of the Louvre Museum after a series of crises, is seen as the frontrunner in the race to helm city hall by pollster Ifop, but not until after a second round of voting set for March 22.