Days before deportation, Ottawa pauses removal of refugee’s son, husband


A federal minister has stepped in to temporarily stop the deportation of a Montreal father and son, a last-minute decision the family’s lawyer says underscores growing concerns that Canadian authorities are increasingly and abruptly separating the families of recognized refugees.

The intervention came Saturday, just days before the father, Ravi Chauhan, and son were scheduled to be removed from Canada Monday evening. Their lawyer says the one-month deferral will give officials time to review the situation and consider longer-term options to allow the family to remain together. CBC News reported Chauhan and his family’s story Friday.

Immigration lawyer Stewart Istvanffy welcomed the decision, crediting Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree for stepping in, but said the case raises concerns about how such removals are being pursued in the first place.

“I’m very pleased that the Minister of Public Safety has intervened to keep this family together and that they recognize that some kind of a serious mistake has been made,” Istvanffy said Sunday.

“But I’m really dismayed at the immigration bureaucracy choosing to violate our Charter and fundamental rights and I want there to be some kind of a political intervention to make sure that I don’t have to be doing the same type of thing next month.”

A spokesperson for the minister declined to comment in response to a request from CBC News on Sunday.

A woman and man sitting at office chairs are seen from behind silhouetted against a window view onto a city park.
Ravi Chauhan, right, and his spouse fled India with their toddler in 2023. The father and son’s deportation, once set for Monday, has been deferred for at least a month. (Verity Stevenson/CBC)

Advocates say the case is not isolated. Several immigration lawyers and community groups told CBC News they have in recent weeks seen an increase in deportation orders involving the spouses and children of protected persons — a shift they say risks undermining Canada’s commitments to family reunification.

Maryse Poisson of the Montreal Welcome Collective said she has seen two similar cases in the past week.

“We’re getting reactions from lawyers all over Canada who are saying, ‘It goes against the advice every legal counsel has been giving families for years,'” Poisson said. “To our knowledge, this is unprecedented.”

Until recently, families of protected persons were allowed to stay in Canada while awaiting decisions on their permanent residency applications, according to the advocates CBC News spoke with.

“It’s a sharp break with previous practices,” Istvanffy said.

A man with white hair, glasses and a blue button down shirt sits at a desk.
Immigration lawyer Stewart Istvanffy is working to keep Ravi Chauhan’s family together in Canada. (Verity Stevenson/CBC)

Refugees are not allowed to return to their home country while awaiting permanent residency, and Chauhan and his son would be unlikely to obtain visas to return to Canada if deported. Permanent residency delays in Quebec are about 10 years, according to Immigration, Refugee and Citizenship Canada’s (IRCC) processing times website.

On Thursday, in response to Istvanffy’s request to defer Chauhan and his son’s removal, a Canada Border Services (CBSA) agent wrote that “invoking the best interests of the children does not represent sufficient grounds on its own to justify deferring a removal.”

The agent said Istvanffy had not provided enough evidence to show how Chauhan’s son would suffer from being separated from his mother for at least six years and that the family could stay in touch “by telephone or through social media, if they so desire,” or could travel to a third country for a visit “in an effort to maintain and nurture their relationship.”

CBC News has agreed not to identify the woman because she fears retaliation in India. The family fled in 2023 after she was attacked and threatened, and she was granted refugee status in September 2024.

CBC News has also viewed footage of a group of men visiting the family’s home in the Indian state of Haryana in late February, and has agreed not to reveal the details of the woman’s claim because of the threats the family faces.

Chauhan and his wife met and fell in love while she was caring for his mother as a nurse. They married five years later in 2020. The family relies on Chauhan’s job at a Montreal Tim Hortons, while his wife, who continues to suffer pain and trauma from her experiences in India, cares for their son.

“Sometimes at night she cries. I care for her. I take care of her,” Chauhan said. “If I’m not here, who will take care of my wife?”

Reached by phone Sunday, Chauhan said the deferral was “good news” but that he would be meeting with Istvanffy later in the day to hear more and was worried about what could happen in a month. “My son and my wife are very stressed,” he said.

A man speaks in front of another man and a Quebec flag and a Canadian flag.
Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree makes a press announcement in Montreal last Monday. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press)

In response to a request for comment before the government’s intervention, a CBSA spokesperson wrote in emailed statement Friday, that a decision from the immigration ministry or refugee board granting someone protected status “does not automatically make their family members protected persons nor does it make them immune from removal proceedings.”

Earlier this month, La Presse reported the case of a Mexican mother in Quebec who was set to be deported despite her spouse having protected person status and the couple having a 20-month-old son who was born in Canada. Immigration Minister Lena Metlege Diab intervened at the last minute to stop the woman’s removal while she was awaiting departure at the Montreal airport last week.

Advocates are calling on Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) to create a policy to prevent similar family separations.

In an emailed statement Thursday, IRCC spokesperson Jeffrey MacDonald said decisions to remove people from Canada are “not taken lightly.”

“Every individual facing removal is entitled to due process, but once all avenues to appeal are exhausted, they are removed from Canada in accordance with Canadian law,” MacDonald wrote.

Last year, the CBSA pledged to remove an additional 4,000 people by 2027.



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