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First flight of Syrian refugees now headed to Toronto from Beirut

OTTAWA – They escaped a civil war that has killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced millions more, leaving behind homes that have been bombed to pieces, their livelihoods and future hopes in tatters.

They fled to Jordan, Turkey, Lebanon – living in refugee camps, shantytowns and private apartments, trying to figure out their next steps, watching as what they thought would just be a temporary move away from their home country began to look more permanent.

READ MORE: Ontario sponsors cheer arrival of Syrian refugee families at Toronto airport

This week, hundreds of Syrians will be on the move again, this time to Canada with the first mass arrival of refugees as part of the Liberal government’s commitment to Syrian refugee resettlement.

WATCH: Kathleen Wynne ‘confident’ Canada is ready for refugees

 

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The first flight, a military plane with 160 people on board, left Beirut on Thursday en route to Germany, where it will make a stop for refuelling and a fresh crew before heading on to Toronto.

The refugees will touchdown at the Infield Terminal, which will not be open to the public or media. Officials at the airport have asked that people do not bring clothes or other donations to the airport because they are concerned about security.

REMINDER: Our Infield Terminal will not be open for the public, media or employees not assigned to work in the area. The...

Posted by Toronto Pearson International Airport on Thursday, 10 December 2015

A second flight is set to arrive Saturday in Montreal.

All told, about 300 people will arrive in the next few days with a chance to make a home in Canada thanks to private sponsors who’ve been working for months to prepare for them.

“We have great hopes for the success of this group of people that are arriving and their families as they build their new home here in Canada,” said Arif Virani, the parliamentary secretary for immigration.

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The sponsors will still have to wait a little while longer to meet their new arrivals.

Border agents, health officials and immigration officers will be on hand when the plane touches down to run the refugees through a battery of tests. They will spend the night in hotels before moving on to their new homes.

WATCH: First privately sponsored Syrian refugees arrive in Toronto

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is planning to be on hand, and he has invited opposition leaders to be there too.

Montreal and Toronto will be home to dozens of such flights in the coming weeks as the government seeks to bring 10,000 Syrians to Canada by year’s end, and then a further 15,000 by the end of February.

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While Syrian refugees have been arriving with some regularity since the Liberals were sworn into office on Nov. 4, they’ve arrived on commercial flights. Thursday sees the first government aircraft return from a deployment specific to a program that began as a Liberal campaign promise.

Even when in opposition, the Liberals had called for Canada to increase its commitment to Syrian resettlement, suggesting back in March that 25,000 was the number in their sights; the prior Conservative government had initially pledged to take in 11,300 people by the end of 2018.

READ MORE: Long-awaited details on Syrians settling in Nova Scotia expected today

But during the campaign, the Liberals put forward a more ambitious goal – the government would take in 25,000 people itself and work with private sponsors to bring in even more.

They later went further, saying they’d bring in that many people by the end of this year.

Work on that started the very day the Liberals won power, with companies like Air Canada reaching out immediately to see if their planes could be helpful as part of the program. Once the first two military flights arrive, private chartered flights will shuttle the vast majority of the remaining Syrians to Canada.

It wasn’t until the Liberals struck a cabinet sub-committee specifically designed to roll out the program that plans began to coalesce – and one of the first things they heard from their international partners was a plea to reconsider their original year-end deadline.

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READ MORE: Turkish court seeks lengthy prison terms for migrant traffickers in Alan Kurdi death

Together, Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon are hosting close to 3 million of the 4.28 million UN-registered refugees who have fled Syria since the war began there in 2011.

The Liberals also broke their plan down into stages.

WATCH: Taking a closer look at refugees’ journey before they arrive at the screening facility

To meet the 25,000 goal, about 10,000 would be those who have private sponsors at the ready and in many cases, those files were already in the immigration system because of the previous Conservative commitments. Those would be the cases targeted for settlement by the end of the year; private cases are easier because the support structure is already in place.

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Then, a further 15,000 spaces would be reserved for government-assisted refugees with the goal of bringing them in by the end of February 2016.

In recent months, thousands of Syrian refugees have been arriving in Canada but the Liberals are only counting those who’ve landed since they officially took office on Nov. 4 as part of their commitment.

As of Dec. 7, that number was 416. The government says they have 11,932 applications currently in the system.

WATCH: McCallum: 11,932 refugee applications in process, 1451 permanent resident visas issued

With a file from Global’s Rebecca Joseph. 

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