Monday, May 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Court Finds Designation Of Egyptian Man As Security Threat Unreasonable

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 May, 2016 12:31 PM
    TORONTO — The Canadian government's designation of an Egyptian man as a threat to national security is unreasonable, a federal court judge has ruled.
     
    The decision in favour of Mahmoud Jaballah, a father of three, could see the end of an ordeal that first saw Canada brand him as a terrorist more than 16 years ago.
     
    "I conclude that the security certificate filed by the minister is not reasonable and will be set aside," Federal Court Judge Dolores Hansen said in her decision.
     
    "Classified reasons will also be issued and will include the information that cannot be disclosed for reasons of national security."
     
    The public reasons for Hansen's decision were not immediately available Tuesday.
     
    The government has long insisted that Mahjoub, now 54, was a ranking member of the Vanguards of Conquest, an Egyptian group linked to al-Qaida. Mahjoub also worked on an agricultural project in Sudan run by former al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden in the early 1990s.
     
    His lawyers argued the government had failed to produce independent evidence that Mahjoub ever committed, or would commit, terrorist acts. They also said Canada's spy agency had made no attempts to investigate or verify information about him it was given by foreign intelligence services.
     
    A beaming Jaballah, of Toronto, who came to Canada in 1995 and was initially granted refugee status, was not immediately able to comment on Hansen's ruling due to court-imposed conditions, but his lawyer, Marlys Edwardh, told The Canadian Press it had been a long and difficult ordeal.
     
    "He has spent earlier on years in a maximum-security setting, part of it in solitary confinement...merely because of the allegations," Edwardh said.
     
    Jaballah was originally arrested in Canada in 1999 under a highly criticized national security certificate based largely on secret evidence he was not allowed to see. That certificate was quickly deemed unreasonable, but the government issued a second one in 2001, which was upheld in 2003 after the government argued it had new secret evidence against him.
     
    In 2007, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled the national certificate process to be unfair because of the secrecy, and quashed the certificates but gave the government a year to rewrite the rules. As a result, Ottawa appointed special advocates — lawyers with top-level security clearance able to review the government's secret evidence.
     
    In 2008, the government issued the third certificate against Jaballah — the one Hansen has now found unreasonable.
     
    "It is a long, deeply challenging road to have walked," Edwardh said.
     
    In previous years, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service admitted listening in on calls between Mahjoub and his lawyers, and, in 2011, government lawyers mistakenly took files belonging to his defence.
     
    Jaballah has said that he was jailed without charge and tortured on several occasions in Egypt. He staved off deportation to Egypt on the basis he would likely be tortured there.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ex-Justice Minister To Defend Daughter Of Former Top Bureaucrat In Murder Case

    Ex-Justice Minister To Defend Daughter Of Former Top Bureaucrat In Murder Case
    Anne Norris, 28, was charged earlier this month after the body of Marcel Reardon was found under the stairwell of a St. John's apartment building.

    Ex-Justice Minister To Defend Daughter Of Former Top Bureaucrat In Murder Case

    Report To Assess Role Of Killer's 'Cultural' Background In Halifax Shooting

    Report To Assess Role Of Killer's 'Cultural' Background In Halifax Shooting
    Kale Leonard Gabriel's defence team told a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge today it is preparing a "cultural assessment" on his racial background.

    Report To Assess Role Of Killer's 'Cultural' Background In Halifax Shooting

    Fire Chief Wants Deadly Section Of Trans-Canada In Nova Scotia Twinned

    Fire Chief Wants Deadly Section Of Trans-Canada In Nova Scotia Twinned
    Joe MacDonald, who has been chief of the Barneys River Fire Department since 2000, estimates he has seen hundreds of accidents along Highway 104 since joining the volunteer force in 1987.

    Fire Chief Wants Deadly Section Of Trans-Canada In Nova Scotia Twinned

    Court Won't Toss Omar Khadr Appeal Judge But Says Serious Issues At Stake

    Nevertheless, the D.C. Circuit said it was not prepared at this time to grant the former Guantanamo Bay inmate's request.

    Court Won't Toss Omar Khadr Appeal Judge But Says Serious Issues At Stake

    CRTC Launches Public Hearing To Evaluate So-Called $25 Skinny Cable TV

    CRTC Launches Public Hearing To Evaluate So-Called $25 Skinny Cable TV
    As of March 1, the CRTC mandated cable and satellite TV service providers to offer basic cable packages capped at $25 monthly and let consumers either add channels onto their subscriptions in an a-la-carte manner or through pre-packaged bundles.

    CRTC Launches Public Hearing To Evaluate So-Called $25 Skinny Cable TV

    A Test For Trudeau Liberals: More Than 250 Canadian Scientists Demand Site C Be Stopped

    A Test For Trudeau Liberals: More Than 250 Canadian Scientists Demand Site C Be Stopped
    The Royal Society of Canada is joining some 250 academics in calling on the Liberal government to stop development on British Columbia's Site C hydroelectric project.

    A Test For Trudeau Liberals: More Than 250 Canadian Scientists Demand Site C Be Stopped