Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Iranian Woman Facing Deportation From Canada Granted Temporary Residency

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Feb, 2017 11:55 AM
    MONTREAL — An Iranian woman who'd been threatened with expulsion from Canada next week and feared for her safety has received a two-year residency permit.
     
    The federal government granted the reprieve to Roghayeh Azizi Mirmahaleh on Thursday, five days before her scheduled deportation to Iran.
     
    Her lawyer, Stephanie Valois, confirmed the news in an email and said they will now try to find a way to have her stay permanently. 
     
    Mirmahaleh, 60, had been held at a detention centre in Quebec after her arrest on Tuesday by the Canada Border Services Agency.
     
    Authorities detained the Montrealer because they feared she was a flight risk ahead of her scheduled departure from Canada, where she has lived since 2012.
     
    Mirmahaleh appeared in good spirits Thursday as she boarded a taxi outside immigration offices with her daughter, Sahar Brahimi, who said her mother was happy to be freed.
     
    Her case was taken up by numerous politicians, including Quebec solidaire member Amir Khadir, who sat next to Mirmahaleh at a news conference Monday.
     
    He greeted the federal measure positively and said Canada must commit to stop deporting people to countries that violate human rights.
     
    Quebec Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil told reporters in Quebec City she also welcomed the news of the ministerial permit.
     
    She, along with Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre and federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau, had voiced their support in recent days for a reprieve.
     
    "It's an accumulation of the interventions, but certainly we had a lot of exchanges with the minister's office, they were aware that we had these concerns," Weil said.
     
    Mirmahaleh was denied refugee status because of her ties to an Iranian group, the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran, once deemed by Canada to be a terrorist organization.
     
    The organization has no longer appeared on Canada's blacklist since 2012 and her supporters feared she risked being tortured if returned to her native country.
     
    Valois said earlier this week her client was "really scared'' to return to Iran because she feared for her life after being involved with the exiled opposition group that was critical of the Iranian regime.
     
    She was imprisoned in Iran during the 1980s for her political activism and her husband was executed behind bars in 1988.
     
    Mirmahaleh's release came on the same day the Federal Court was to hear a request for an emergency stay.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Protesters Decry Trump's U.S. Travel Ban; Urge Trudeau Action

    Canadian Protesters Decry Trump's U.S. Travel Ban; Urge Trudeau Action
    Protesters, who also expressed sympathy for the victims of Sunday's mosque massacre in Quebec City, blocked traffic, held placards, chanted, and marched a short distance to city hall and back to the consulate as police kept an eye on them.

    Canadian Protesters Decry Trump's U.S. Travel Ban; Urge Trudeau Action

    Police Identify Man Shot, Killed At Hotel In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    Police Identify Man Shot, Killed At Hotel In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
    VANCOUVER — Police have identified a man who was killed following a shooting in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

    Police Identify Man Shot, Killed At Hotel In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    Vancouver Father-Son Duo Build 3D Printer To Send To The Moon

    Vancouver Father-Son Duo Build 3D Printer To Send To The Moon
    VANCOUVER — For Alex and Sergei Dobrianski, the building blocks of an upcoming revolution in the space industry are found in moon dust.

    Vancouver Father-Son Duo Build 3D Printer To Send To The Moon

    Don't Call Us Junkies Or Addicts: People Who Use Illicit Drugs Say Lingo Matters

     Calling someone a junkie was once the norm, but many people who use illicit drugs and those who treat them say the word addict is just as stigmatizing

    Don't Call Us Junkies Or Addicts: People Who Use Illicit Drugs Say Lingo Matters

    $250,000 Task Force Set Up By UBC To Fight Trump Travel Ban

    $250,000 Task Force Set Up By UBC To Fight Trump Travel Ban
    The University of British Columbia is setting up a task force in response to an American travel ban that prevents residents of seven countries from entering the United States for 90 days.

    $250,000 Task Force Set Up By UBC To Fight Trump Travel Ban

    B.C. Premier Expresses Sadness At Mosque Attack As Violation Of Sanctuary

    B.C. Premier Expresses Sadness At Mosque Attack As Violation Of Sanctuary
    B.C. Premier Christy Clark expressed her shock and sadness Monday after a terrorist attack at a mosque in Quebec City.

    B.C. Premier Expresses Sadness At Mosque Attack As Violation Of Sanctuary