Palestinian students stranded in third country seeing visas processed after long wait

  • Canadian Press

University of Toronto professor Amer Shalaby speaks as he is joined by (left to right) Terezia Zoric of the University of Toronto, Diana Allan of McGill University and Dania Kassim, representative of the Legal Centre for Palestine, at a press conference in Ottawa on Tuesday, June 2, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

OTTAWA -- A spokesperson for Immigration Minister Lena Diab says expedited visa processing for 37 Gazan students and their families stranded in a third country is underway.

The news follows a lengthy advocacy campaign by Canadian academics who have been calling on the government to do more for Palestinian students who have been waiting upwards of two years for a visa decision.

Advocates say about 130 Palestinian students who have been accepted at Canadian universities are still stuck abroad, many of them in Gaza, where Israel controls entries and exits.

Diab's spokesperson says most of the 37 students, who are not in Gaza, have received a final decision but has not said how many have been approved or denied.

The remaining visa interviews are scheduled for this week, according to the department.

The department says safety must remain the "top priority" and all visa applicants must complete necessary security and admissibility checks.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 2, 2026.