The U.S. State Department has
blamed Canada's "lax immigration laws" and generous welfare system for growing
problems the country is facing from organized crime groups that traffic in women
and children for prostitution and forced labour.
The report came just
three days after 12 South Koreans were caught attempting to walk across the
U.S.-Canada border near the Coutts-Sweetgrass crossing, a bust officials say has
put a dent in an international human smuggling ring with its tentacles across
Western Canada.
Two South Korean women will likely be thrown out of the
country Friday as a result of the bust, and will likely be followed by eight
more following immigration hearings in Calgary today.
The women admitted
they came to Canada for the sole purpose of being smuggled into the
U.S.
Fisher said the problem is growing. In the past year, the number of
South Koreans caught illegally crossing the B.C. border into Washington state
has increased tenfold, to more than 100.
"These are the ones that got
caught trying. The numbers of people who made it successfully across? We don't
know."