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Ugandan Asian Refugee Movement 1972

October 4, 2012 at 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Location:2017 Dunton Tower
Cost:Free
Audience:Anyone
Key Contact:Institute of African Studies
Contact Email:african_studies@carleton.ca
Contact Phone:613-555-2600 x 2220

The Institute of African Studies, Migration and Diaspora Studies, Metropolis & the Canadian Immigration Historical Society  present

 

40th Anniversary Lecture: Ugandan Asian Refugee Movement 1972

 

with

 

Mike Molloy, Canadian Immigration Historical Society

 

Thursday, 4 October, 12:001:30 pm

 

The Arts Lounge, 2017 Dunton Tower, Carleton University*


The 1972 Uganda Asian Refugee movement was the first test of Canada’s “Universal” immigration policy as applied to refugees. The talk will examine the reasons behind General Idi Amin’s decision to expel Uganda’s small but dynamic Asian community and the Trudeau government’s reaction to the expulsion within a new Immigration and refugee policy framework.  It will describe how a small, hastily assembled team went to Kampala in September 1972 and moved over 6000 refugees to Canada by the 8 November deadline imposed by the Ugandan government. Finally it will examine the impact of the Ugandan experience on the refugee resettlement provisions of the 1976 Immigration Act and on the subsequent Indochinese refugee program of 1979-80.

 Mike Molloy, a retired Foreign Service Officer, is president of the Canadian Immigration Historical Society and a Senior Fellow at the University of Ottawa’s Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. He was a member of the team sent to Uganda in 1972 in September 1972 where he managed the unit that interviewed the refugees. His subsequent career included implementing the refugee provisions of the 1976 Immigration Act, including the refugee sponsorship program, coordinating the 1979-80 Indochinese Refugee movement, and managing Canada’s relations with the UN High Commissioner for Refugee in Geneva. He held various Director General level positions in the Immigration department , was Ambassador to Jordan, coordinated Canada’s Middle East Peace Process activities and since retirement has co-directed the Jerusalem Old City Initiative at the University of Windsor. In the course of his career he served in Japan, Lebanon, Minneapolis, Geneva, Jordan (twice), Syria and Kenya.

See poster.