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Q-1295
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Thursday, June 11, 2026 |
With regard to international assistance provided by Global Affairs Canada, since January 1, 2023: (a) does Global Affairs Canada maintain a centralized system that records implementing partners for all international assistance programs beyond the first-tier recipient, and, if so, what is the name of this system; and (b) if the answer to (a) is no, what systems are used instead to track implementing partners; (c) is the recording of implementing partners mandatory for all international assistance programs; (d) broken down by each year since 2023 were there any programs for which implementing partner information was not recorded, and, if so, how many and which ones; (e) for how many programs does Global Affairs Canada have complete records of all implementing partners involved in program delivery; (f) for how many programs are implementing partner records incomplete or partially unavailable; (g) for each funding channel (bilateral, multilateral, United Nations agencies), what percentage of programs include full implementing partner disclosure; (h) were intermediary organizations contractually required in all cases to disclose implementing partners as a condition of receiving funds, and, if not, what are the names of all programs where this requirement did not apply; (i) how many programs cannot be fully traced from initial Government of Canada disbursement to the level of final implementing partners; (j) for programs where implementing partners are not fully identifiable, what are their names and reasons for the lack of traceability; (k) for each instance in (j) what steps, if any, is Global Affairs Canada taking to address the situation; (l) does Global Affairs Canada take the position that the current system is sufficient to ensure full transparency of implementing partners for all international assistance funding, and, if so, on what basis is this assessment made; and (m) if the answer to (l) is no, what gaps have been identified in the system? |
Awaiting response |
Monday, September 21, 2026 |
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Q-1261
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Friday, June 5, 2026 |
With regard to government funding for foreign aid and international development during the 2025-26 fiscal year: what was the amount of funding provided, in total and broken down by recipient country? |
Awaiting response |
Monday, September 21, 2026 |
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Q-1105
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Wednesday, April 22, 2026 |
With regard to grants and contributions provided by government departments or agencies to universities or colleges located outside of Canada: (a) what was the number and total value of all such instances of funding provided during the 2025-26 fiscal year; and (b) what are the details of each such grant or contribution, including, for each, the (i) date, (ii) amount, (iii) type of funding, (iv) name and location of the recipient institution, (v) purpose of the funding? |
Answered |
Monday, June 8, 2026 |
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Q-1082
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Monday, April 20, 2026 |
With regard to Canada's decision to participate in the April 8, 2026, consensus decision to nominate the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations' Committee for Programme and Coordination, as detailed in Global Affairs Canada's April 19, 2026, post on X from the @CanadaFP account: (a) what specific factors informed the government's decision not to intervene or call a vote; (b) which departments and officials were involved in that decision, including whether the Minister of Foreign Affairs or the minister's office was consulted; (c) what legal, diplomatic, or policy analysis was conducted in advance of the decision; (d) were any concerns or objections raised by officials regarding Canada's position, and, if so, what were they; (e) how does Canada differentiate its position from the one on the April 2022 objection raised regarding Russia; (f) what communications took place between the Government of Canada and foreign governments, international organizations, or external stakeholders regarding Canada's anticipated role in the meeting; (g) what internal discussions took place following the meeting regarding Canada's decision not to intervene; and (h) who approved the @CanadaFP social media post referencing the meeting, and did that post reflect the government's official position? |
Answered |
Friday, June 5, 2026 |
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Q-305
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Monday, September 15, 2025 |
With regard to the temporary public policy announced by the Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship on November 20, 2023, to reunite previously resettled Yazidis and other survivors of Daesh in Canada with their family members in northern Iraq, excluding any applications received before October 31, 2023:
(a) how many applications have been received under this specific public policy since November 20, 2023, broken down by month and by the location of the processing office;
(b) how many applications (i) have been accepted, (ii) have been rejected, (iii) have been withdrawn, (iv) have been deemed incomplete, (v) are still in process;
(c) how many principal applicants and how many dependents are included in each of the categories listed in (b);
(d) what is the average and median processing time for complete applications under this public policy, including those that were rejected or withdrawn; (e) what were the five most common grounds for rejection under this public policy;
(f) how many times has the department used its discretion to waive documentation or admissibility requirements due to the applicant's circumstances under this public policy, and in what types of cases or contexts were these waivers applied; (g) how many applications under this policy have either been (i) voluntarily withdrawn by the applicant, (ii) closed by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, (iii) abandoned by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada;
(h) for each case in (g)(i) to (g)(iii), what were the reasons or grounds cited by the department;
(i) how many of the 400 allocated spots under the policy have been filled to date, and does Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada anticipate filling all 400 before the expiry date of December 31, 2026;
and (j) has Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada communicated any eligibility criteria, quotas, internal directives, or guidance to visa officers or Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada staff related to prioritizing, triaging, or refusing certain types of applicants under this public policy, and, if so, what are those instructions? |
Answered |
Friday, October 31, 2025 |