This N.S. woman has been waiting almost 2 years to bring 23 family members fleeing Gaza

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This N.S. woman has been waiting almost 2 years to bring 23 family members fleeing Gaza

CBC ArchivesA Palestinian woman in Halifax, N.S., is making an impassioned plea for Canada to speed up its special measures visa program for people trying to escape Gaza, about 20 months after applying to bring her own family here.Najlaa Alzaanin hasn’t seen her family since moving to Canada in 2019Gareth Hampshire · CBC News · Posted: Oct 09, 2025 5:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 4 hours agoNajlaa Alzaanin says conditions her family members are being forced to endure in Gaza are ‘unbelievable’ and Canada’s special measures visa program is taking too long. (Gareth Hampshire/CBC)A Palestinian woman in Halifax, N.S., is making an impassioned plea for Ottawa to step up efforts to get people safely out of war-torn Gaza, about 20 months after applying to bring her family to Canada under a temporary visa program.Najlaa Alzaanin, who hasn’t seen 23 family members since moving to Canada in 2019, is still waiting for news on her bid to bring them here under the federal government’s special measures program.“Canada is not fulfilling the promise that they made and they are not helping our families to get to a safer place,” Alzaanin said in an interview.Her mother, brother and nephew had to be pulled from rubble at the beginning of the war, she said, and her family has been constantly on the move since bombing attacks “wiped out” their home community of Beit Hanoun on the northeastern edge of the Gaza Strip where they farmed olives.Alzaanin said she has lost count of the number of times they have been displaced and describes the conditions they are enduring as “unbelievable,” with most now resorting to shelter in tents.“It breaks my heart every time I see my family going through this genocide,” she said. “I can’t do anything.”The Gaza health ministry has said more than 67,000 Palestinians have been killed since Israel began its offensive following the Hamas-led attack on Israel in October 2023 in which nearly 1,200 people were killed and 251 more were taken hostage, according to Israel.A UN inquiry ruled earlier this month Israel has committed genocide, a finding Israel denies.Najlaa Alzaanin worries about her mother, who she says has diabetes and has lost about 50 pounds during the crisis. (Najlaa Alzaanin)Alzaanin is especially anxious for her 62-year-old mother, who is diabetic and is struggling to access medications as well as food and clean water.“Her weight went down from about 150 pounds to only 100 pounds, because there is no good nutrition for her health conditions,” Alzaanin said.Her family is getting by for the most part on lentils and canned food, she said.Canada says 880 people have arrived under the programThe Department of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada launched its special measures program in January 2024 for extended family members of Canadians and permanent residents in Gaza.There is a cap of 5,000 applications. As of July 29, the department said, 880 people have been brought to Canada by way of that program. It said about 400 others have arrived under other programs.“It’s so little, it’s an embarrassment for Canada to purport itself as having put forward a sincere immigration program when we see numbers like that,” said Halifax lawyer Asaf Rashid, who is also with the International Centre of Justice for Palestinians-Canada.Rashid said it’s extremely difficult for people in a war zone to complete applications.Wassim Obeid, who is trying to bring 15 family members to Halifax, said he thinks a biometrics requirement is delaying his application.“Since they’re still in Gaza, they cannot do biometrics,” he said. “They would have to give their fingerprints.”Obeid, who like Alzaanin submitted his application when the program was launched, is frustrated about the time it is taking.“I know friends who lost many family members while they’re waiting for the visa procedures and I’m afraid I’m going to lose them.” I have to keep fighting for them and for other Palestinians- Najlaa AlzaaninAn IRCC statement said there are challenges beyond its control. It noted it does not have any presence in Gaza but said security screening is part of the process.“These measures are to prevent anyone who poses a threat to the health, safety, or security of Canadians, from entering Canada,” the statement said. Alzaanin said her mother and sister were able to submit biometrics before the war started under a different program, so she does not understand the delay on their files. She transferred their applications to the special measures program.Her family’s resilience is what keeps her going.”I have to keep fighting for them and for other Palestinians.”MORE TOP STORIESABOUT THE AUTHORGareth Hampshire began his career with CBC News in Edmonton. He is now based in Halifax.

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