Wednesday, December 10, 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

Freeland says she's abandoning capital gains tax change because of Trump

Freeland says she's abandoning capital gains tax change because of Trump
Former finance minister Chrystia Freeland says her promise to repeal changes to the capital gains tax was made in response to Donald Trump's election in the United States. Freeland is running to be the next leader of the Liberal party and the next prime minister.

Freeland says she's abandoning capital gains tax change because of Trump

Additional housing for Nanaimo campus

Additional housing for Nanaimo campus
Construction is underway on additional student housing on the Vancouver Island University campus in Nanaimo. BC's Ministry of Post-Secondary Education says the addition will provide 266 new beds along with study rooms, lounge areas, shared kitchens and a 200-seat dining hall.

Additional housing for Nanaimo campus

Man charged with murder in B.C. shooting that left one dead, another injured

Man charged with murder in B.C. shooting that left one dead, another injured
A suspect has been charged with second-degree murder in a shooting in British Columbia's northeast that left one person dead and another injured. Mounties in Dawson Creek say a 23-year-old man has been arrested and remains in custody pending a court appearance Thursday.

Man charged with murder in B.C. shooting that left one dead, another injured

Trump calls on OPEC to bring down cost of oil at World Economic Forum

Trump calls on OPEC to bring down cost of oil at World Economic Forum
U.S. President Donald Trump told an elite global audience today that he is going to ask the OPEC+ alliance of oil exporting countries to bring down the cost of oil. He made the comments in a wide-ranging address to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Trump calls on OPEC to bring down cost of oil at World Economic Forum

Payments to shortchanged caregivers of kids with disabilities satisfy B.C. watchdog

Payments to shortchanged caregivers of kids with disabilities satisfy B.C. watchdog
British Columbia's ombudsperson says he's satisfied the provincial government has fixed a problem that shortchanged caregivers of children with disabilities to the tune of more than $1 million in federal funding.

Payments to shortchanged caregivers of kids with disabilities satisfy B.C. watchdog

2 recreational vehicles destroyed in fire

2 recreational vehicles destroyed in fire
Mounties in Hope say two recreational vehicles were destroyed in a fire that also damaged two others last night. They say officers, firefighters and paramedics responded to the fire in the area of the American Creek Forest Service Road.

2 recreational vehicles destroyed in fire