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As migrants die in detention centres, 做厙TV experts ask: When will Canada act?

The Conversation with 做厙TV's Petra Molnar and Stephanie J Silverman

Lucia Vega Jimenez, 42, Mexico.

Jan Szamko, 31, Czech Republic.

Melkioro Gahungu, 64, Burundi.

Abdurahman Hassan, 39, Somalia

And at least 11 more.

Earlier this month, died while being detained in a maximum-security provincial jail in Ontario. She did not commit any crimes, but was imprisoned because of her immigration status.

Since 2000, at least 16 people have died while incarcerated in Canadas system of immigration detention, with a shocking four deaths since March 2016.

The mounting death toll leads us to ask: Do certain deaths matter less than others? And for that matter, are some lives more imprisonable than others?

Our research examines the socio-legal ins and outs of immigration detention, a allowed to grow under the auspices of it being a form of administrative not criminal law.

In this parallel system, the government of Canada is locking up migrants and refugee claimants, not for any crimes committed under the Criminal Code but for immigration-related reasons.

Isolated from support system

Many are held in immigration holding centres, facilities akin to prisons but exclusive to immigration detainees, but a third are transferred to maximum-security jails far from where their friends, family and lawyers live and where they are forced to interact with the convicted population.

Also, its important to remember that we are dealing with a highly traumatized population, often suffering serious mental health issues as a result of fleeing their countries and arriving in Canada. When migrants are isolated and further traumatized by being detained, it becomes difficult to gather evidence for their refugee cases, to retain lawyers and to attend advice sessions.

Detention creates profound access-to-justice concerns and has a significant impact on the way a detainees case is treated in Canadas immigration system.

We have found that the immigration detention population most acutely. You may have read about , or the and system of and and in the United States, but do not be fooled by matters of scale: Canada is also engaged in this practice of .

Affects mental health

: It negatively impacts the mental health of detainees, separates family members, and prevents detained people from adequate access to counsel, community supports and psycho-social counselling.

Unlike in the criminal system where all prisoners know the length of their sentences, there are no time limits on Canadian immigration detention. There are also no rights to a lawyer, translator or outgoing phone calls. This .

Lucia Vega Jimenez is shown in a coroners inquest handout photo released in September 2014. Jimenez died in hospital days after she was found hanging in a Canada Border Services Agency holding cell at Vancouvers airport in December 2013 (photo by The Canadian Press)

We are also learning that detainees may be placed in solitary confinement, also known as segregation. Some are confined for prolonged periods of time. For example, was isolated for 103 consecutive days without review, access to counsel or ongoing medical assessments.

There are also documented cases of for up to two weeks, resulting in increased post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and exacerbation of the past trauma associated with fleeing war.

Various international mechanisms recognize solitary confinement as a form of torture. Detainees themselves recognize the brutal nature of this practice and hunger strikes have broken out among immigration detainees in over Canadas segregation practices.

No insight over segregation decisions

In our study on , we are finding shockingly little oversight of solitary confinement decisions on both segregation and release.

In a shadowy world of arbitrary, opaque and unaccountable decision-making, there is no clear pathway out from solitary let alone from detention. and must end. 

We do not yet know why or how the latest death in detention occurred, but we do know that Canada continually falls short of international standards on the and . While there are review mechanisms in place, they are cursory at best, and Canada is one of the few countries without limits on time spent in detention. .

A recent labelled the system Kafkaesque, an endless circuit of mistakes, unproven accusations and technicalities, and a closed circle of self-referential and circuitous logic from which there is no escape.

Ultimately, Canadas immigration detention regime is a costly, ineffective and discretionary system that violates the human rights of migrants, including the right to a fair trial, the right not to be arbitrarily detained, and the right to life, liberty and security of person.

How many more people have to die before the government of Canada acts?

 is a lawyer with the International Human Rights Program at 做厙TV's Faculty of Law.   is a postdoctoral researcher at 做厙TV.

This article was originally published on . Read the .

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