As of 1
December, Mexicans will no longer need a visa to visit Canada and are only
required to have an Electronic
Travel Authorisation, which can be applied for online and costs CAD
$7.
The
move provides a stark contrast to proposed policies from the US president-elect Donald Trump, who has said
he will immediately deport between two and three million illegal immigrants and
will build a wall along the US-Mexican border. He said after he was elected
that some parts of the wall would be a fence instead.
Canadian
prime minister Justin Trudeau made
the announcement to lift the need for a visa in June as he stood beside Mexican
president Enrique Pena Nieto.
"This
move will make it easier for our Mexican friends to visit Canada while growing
our local economies and strengthening our communities," Mr Trudeau
said, as reported by the Canadian Press.
Now
Mexicans just apply for an ETA online with a valid passport, credit card and an
email address.
The
Canadian immigration website promises that the form just takes a few minutes to
complete, and can take between a few minutes and a few days to process.
Visa
restrictions were introduced by the previous Conservative government in 2009 to
stop thousands of Mexicans seeking asylum, a move that has created tension
between the two countries.
While
the conservative opposition have argued the visas should not be lifted until
its full impact can be assessed - they say the rate of Mexican nationals seeking
asylum has dropped from 25 per cent in 2008 to below one per cent over the last
four years - Mr Trudeau’s liberal party promised to remove the restrictions.
South
of the Canadian border, Mr Trump has vowed to stop Mexicans, who he said were
“murderers”, “rapists” and “drug dealers”, from coming to the US.
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