Foreign workers protesting the P.E.I. government’s recent immigration policy changes say they’ve agreed to pause their no-liquid hunger strike after meeting with the province’s top immigration official.

One of the protest’s organizers, Rupinder Pal Singh, said he met on Friday with Jeff Young, the director of the provincial Office of Immigration. Singh said Young encouraged the group to put a hold on its hunger strike while the government considers their demands.

“They have all the information that they require; now we are just waiting for answers. As the government is cooperating with us, definitely we will be doing the same thing and we are going to pause the ongoing hunger strike, as requested and encouraged by the government,” Singh said. 

“It seems like they received the message and they are working on it, and definitely now [the] ball is in their court only, so … we will be expecting more positive answers sooner.” 

A man in a blue and white jacket with short drak hair sips from a plastic water bottle in front of an encampment.
‘Now we see that there is no more wall. There is somebody we can talk to,’ says Rupinder Pal Singh, one of the protest’s organizers. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

CBC News has reached out to the provincial government for comment on Friday’s development. 

Recent immigration policy changes

The group has been protesting in Charlottetown since May 9, and many of them began a hunger strike just over one week ago on the lawn in front of the George Coles Building, where the P.E.I. Legislature sits. On Tuesday night of this week, some of the protesters also stopped drinking liquids to draw attention to their cause. 

The group is made up of prospective immigrants, and they say their lives have been turned upside down by changes the province made to its immigration policy in February. Those changes make it much harder for people working in sales and service to be nominated for permanent residency by the province — including people who are already working on the Island.

A doctor worries about the medical impact of dry hunger strike on P.E.I. protesters

‘I would say they’re taking risks … they need to have some sort of resolution to this, and I hope that people will not be driven to these sort of states in the future,’ says Dr. David Jenkins.

Most of the protesters are recent graduates from Canadian universities or colleges.

As international students, they were given open work permits for three years, and came to work on P.E.I. because of its reputation as a relatively easy place from which to earn permanent residency. That’s the first step toward becoming a Canadian citizen.

In February, as it released a new population strategy in the face of rising demand for housing and health care, the P.E.I. government said it would severely cut back on the number of nominations in sales and service, from 855 last year to about 215 this year.

Instead, the province plans to give preference to people with experience in fields related to health care and construction.

Renewed optimism

About seven of the protesters were still on the no-liquid hunger strike as of Friday morning, a spokesperson told CBC News early in the day. Some had required medical attention earlier in the week, while protest organizers asked others to voluntarily end their strike due to health concerns.

By Friday afternoon, however, the remaining hunger strikers had begun drinking from water bottles, expressing renewed optimism after finally receiving some communication from the P.E.I. government. 

“Before, it was feeling just low, but as soon as Rupinder came and gave us the good news, it was like a boost and a lot of energy coming in now,” said Navpreet Navpreet, whose work permit for a local call centre expires on June 29.

“It’s like we don’t even care about the hunger and water strike, we are just focusing on the good news…. We are really happy, we are really glad that government has given us a chance, have talked to us and are focusing on our concerns.”

A woman with long, dark hair in a ponytail drinks from a water bottle in front of a tent encampment.
‘It was like a boost,’ says Navpreet Navpreet, one of the protesters, after the group was able to communicate with provincial officials. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

Singh, who has been at the encampment and speaking to the media throughout the protest, also offered a broad smile to a CBC News journalist Friday afternoon when speaking about the group’s efforts. 

While their no-liquid hunger strike is paused, he said the protest will continue 24 hours a day, seven days a week until there’s a resolution on their request for their work permits to be extended. 

“There is a hope that has taken birth now inside me and every protester, because before this we were just up against a wall, and now we see that there is no more wall,” Singh said. “There is somebody we can talk to.” 



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