Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. climate activist couple to live in Pakistan if deportation proceeds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jan, 2025 01:39 PM
  • B.C. climate activist couple to live in Pakistan if deportation proceeds

British Columbia climate activist Zain Haq and his wife Sophia Papp are planning to live together in Pakistan if his threatened deportation proceeds on Saturday, and blame his imminent expulsion on bureaucratic failings by immigration officials.

Haq, a Pakistani citizen who co-founded activist group Save Old Growth as an international student, was granted a temporary resident permit last April, pausing deportation to allow his spousal application for permanent residency to be processed.

But Papp, a Canadian, says Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada then lost the application, and Canada Border Services Agency reactivated the removal order. 

She told a news conference in Vancouver that immigration officials offered no "substantive" or "lawful explanation" to the couple when they were told on Thursday that her spousal sponsorship of Haq had been refused.

Papp says that if her husband is deported on Saturday, he could be the first non-violent climate activist to be removed from Canada, which she says is "shameful and inappropriate."

"We do not have enough time, because of his deportation within 24 hours, to access due process," she says. 

"This is not proper. I am a Canadian citizen. I have the right to live with the spouse of my choosing, whose convictions towards non-violent climate activism have led us here because of mistakes (by) Canada's government."

The couple, who have been married for two years, told the news conference on Friday that they would prefer to build their life in Canada, but if deportation goes forward, they will relocate to Pakistan. 

"I am put in a horrible situation that no Canadian should have to face of either losing my home of Canada or losing my chosen life partner whose commitments, you know, led me to fall in love with him," Papp says.

MORE National ARTICLES

Snowfall warning for 2 BC highways

Snowfall warning for 2 BC highways
Environment Canada is warning of heavy snowfall on two stretches of highways in B-C overnight and possibly stretching into today. The agency says Highway 16 from Tete Jaune Cache to the Alberta boundary will see up to 10 centimetres of snow through noon.

Snowfall warning for 2 BC highways

Elderly driver killed in a T-bone crash

Elderly driver killed in a T-bone crash
Police in Delta are looking for video surveillance footage after an elderly driver was killed in a T-bone collision. Police say the victim was leaving a Wendy's restaurant on December 22nd when the vehicle was struck on its driver's side by another car.

Elderly driver killed in a T-bone crash

Provincial health plans to cover primary care by nurse practitioners, midwives in 2026

Provincial health plans to cover primary care by nurse practitioners, midwives in 2026
Provincial and territorial health plans will cover primary care provided by nurse practitioners, pharmacists and midwives starting next year, federal health minister Mark Holland announced on Friday. 

Provincial health plans to cover primary care by nurse practitioners, midwives in 2026

Opposition NDP demands Alberta government act ahead of school support worker strike

Opposition NDP demands Alberta government act ahead of school support worker strike
More than 3,000 staff, from education assistants to cafeteria workers, employed by the Edmonton Public School Board and the Sturgeon Public School Division could hit picket lines on Monday, joining counterparts in Fort McMurray in demanding fair wages.

Opposition NDP demands Alberta government act ahead of school support worker strike

Analysts expect jobless rate edged up in December

Analysts expect jobless rate edged up in December
Statistics Canada will release the country's job report for December this morning. November saw Canada's unemployment rate rise to 6.8 per cent — the highest jobless rate since January 2017 outside of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Analysts expect jobless rate edged up in December

Human rights group asks Canada to join U.S. and declare another genocide in Sudan

Human rights group asks Canada to join U.S. and declare another genocide in Sudan
A prominent human rights group is calling on Ottawa to follow the U.S. and declare that recent actions by Sudan's paramilitary force amount to genocide. The Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights accused the Rapid Support Forces of carrying out a genocide in the Darfur region months ago, during Sudan's brutal civil war.

Human rights group asks Canada to join U.S. and declare another genocide in Sudan