Document #1236122
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
-Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices for 1987, (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of
State, 1988), pp. 450-451.
-The Imprisonment of Persons Seeking to
Leave a Country or to Return to their Own Country, (London:
Amnesty International, 1986), pp. 7-10.
The numbers of refugee claimants from Cuba and the German
Democratic Republic (GDR) from January 1 to March 27, 1989 are as
follows:1
-German Democratic Republic: One (1) claim,
found without credible basis.
-Cuba: Eight (8) claims, five (5) of them
found with credible basis, others without initial decision as of
March 27.
1. Information provided by Refugee Affairs,
Ottawa.
For information on Cuba, in addition to the documents sent on March
10, 1989, as well as information on the GDR, the following
documents are attached:
-Border and Territorial Disputes,
(London: Longman, 1988), pp. 29-44, 417-420.
-Trade Unions of the World,
(Detroit: Gale Research Company, 1988), pp. 104-106, 160-163.
-Revolutionary and Dissident
Movements, (London: Longman, 1988), pp. 67-69, 123-124.
-Amnesty International Report 1988,
(London: Amnesty International, 1988), pp. 201-203.
-Freedom in the World, (Washington,
D.C.: Freedom House, 1988), pp. 298-299, 314-315.
-World Human Rights Guide, (London:
The Economist, 1988), pp. 69-71, 98-100.
-Yearbook on International Communist
Affairs 1988, (California: Hoover Institution Press, 1988), pp.
64-70, 265-275.
-The Europa Yearbook 1988, (London:
Europa Publications, 1988), pp. 1131-1135, 1140-1152.
-Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices for 1987, (Washington, D.C.: Department of State,
1988), pp. 913-921.
-Critique (Review of the DoS Country
Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1987), (Washington, D.C.:
Human Rights Watch/Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, 1988), pp.
36-37.
For additional information on the German Democratic Republic, the
table of contents and Conclusion section of the most recent
publication available at present at the IRBDC, Ottawa, is enclosed,
German Democratic Republic: Sweeping Laws-Secret Justice,
(London: Amnesty International, January 1989), 73 pages); if not
locally available, sections of interest can be reproduced and sent
upon request.