Egyptian asylum seekers decry ‘Islamophobia’ by Canada’s border agency
VANCOUVER — Attia Elserfy was expecting a second lease on life when he escaped Egypt with his family, landing in Vancouver in October 2018.
But the Elserfys say their lives are in limbo because the Canada Border Services Agency challenged both Attia and his wife’s admissibility as refugees over their ties to a political party outlawed by the Egyptian government.
The Elserfys took part in a hearing in November 2021, but have not heard from immigration officials since, unable to work, they have had to resort to welfare after the Egyptian government froze their assets.
“It’s making me feel crazy, because it’s not the democratic Canada that I expected,” Elserfy said in an interview through an Arabic interpreter. “It makes me feel like I’m still living under the authoritarian regime that I escaped from.”