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55 Canadians detained by ICE as Ottawa demands urgent answers after shocking death in US  custody

55 Canadians detained by ICE as Ottawa demands urgent answers after shocking death in US custody

Time of Indiaa day ago

Canada's Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Anita Anand
, confirmed Friday(June 27) that approximately 55 Canadians are currently being held by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), amid growing scrutiny of
US immigration enforcement policies
and following the death of a Canadian citizen in
ICE custody
earlier this week.
'Our work is to ensure that they're being treated fairly,' Anand told CTV News. 'That's the advocacy that consular officials from Global Affairs Canada do every day, not only in the United States, but around the world.'
Canadian's death in ICE custody
The minister's remarks come as both countries face mounting questions over the death of Johnny Noviello, a 49-year-old Canadian citizen who died in
ICE
custody on June 23 in Miami, Florida.
According to ICE, Noviello had been detained since May 15, after being arrested at a Florida probation office for violating US drug laws. He had entered the US on a visa in 1988 and became a permanent resident three years later. He was convicted in eastern Florida of racketeering and drug trafficking and sentenced to 12 months in prison.
Live Events
Noviello's death was made known to Canadian officials on Thursday, prompting Anand to announce that Ottawa is urgently seeking more information from US authorities. The cause of death remains under investigation, according to ICE.
Anand, speaking from The Hague, Netherlands, said Canadian consular officials had been in contact with Noviello throughout his detention but declined to release further details due to privacy laws. She also expressed condolences to Noviello's family.
ICE operations have drawn growing criticism in recent weeks after Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff, announced plans to dramatically escalate enforcement activity, targeting 3,000 arrests per day, a sharp rise from the 650 daily average during the first five months of President Trump's second term.
The announcement has triggered widespread protests and curfews across major US cities, as immigrant advocacy groups warn of
civil rights violations
and lapses in medical care inside ICE facilities.
For now, Canada says it will continue to press for transparency.
'We're following up with US officials,' Anand said. 'We take the safety and rights of Canadian citizens abroad extremely seriously.'

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Russell Milne, Kashanian's husband, said his wife is not a threat. Her appeal for asylum was complicated because of "events in her early life," he explained. A court found an earlier marriage of hers to be fraudulent. But over four decades, Kashanian, 64, built a life in Louisiana. The couple met when she was bartending as a student in the late 1980s. They married and had a daughter. She volunteered with Habitat for Humanity, filmed Persian cooking tutorials on YouTube and was a grandmother figure to the children next door. The fear of deportation always hung over the family, Milne said, but he said his wife did everything that was being asked of her. "She's meeting her obligations," Milne said. "She's retirement age. She's not a threat. Who picks up a grandmother?" While Iranians have been crossing the border illegally for years, especially since 2021, they have faced little risk of being deported to their home countries due to severed diplomatic relations with the US. That seems to no longer be the case. The Trump administration has deported hundreds of people, including Iranians, to countries other than their own in an attempt to circumvent diplomatic hurdles with governments that won't take their people back. During Trump's second term, countries including El Salvador, Costa Rica and Panama have taken back noncitizens from the US. The administration has asked the Supreme Court to clear the way for several deportations to South Sudan, a war-ravaged country with which it has no ties, after the justices allowed deportations to countries other than those noncitizens came from. The US Border Patrol arrested Iranians 1,700 times at the Mexican border from October 2021 through November 2024, according to the most recent public data available. The Homeland Security Department reported that about 600 Iranians overstayed visas as business or exchange visitors, tourists and students in the 12-month period through September 2023, the most recent data reports. Iran was one of 12 countries subject to a US travel ban that took effect this month. Some fear ICE's growing deportation arrests will be another blow. In Oregon, an Iranian man was detained by immigration agents this past week while driving to the gym. He was picked up roughly two weeks before he was scheduled for a check-in at ICE offices in Portland, according to court documents filed by his attorney, Michael Purcell. The man, identified in court filings as S.F., has lived in the US for over 20 years, and his wife and two children are US citizens. S.F. applied for asylum in the US in the early 2000s, but his application was denied in 2002. His appeal failed but the government did not deport him and he continued to live in the country for decades, according to court documents. Due to "changed conditions" in Iran, S.F. would face "a vastly increased danger of persecution" if he were to be deported, Purcell wrote in his petition. "These circumstances relate to the recent bombing by the United States of Iranian nuclear facilities, thus creating a de facto state of war between the United States and Iran." S.F.'s long residency in the US, his conversion to Christianity and the fact that his wife and children are US citizens "sharply increase the possibility of his imprisonment in Iran, or torture or execution," he said. Similarly, Kashanian's daughter said she is worried what will happen to her mother. "She tried to do everything right," Kaitlynn Milne said.

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