Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court Defines People Smuggling In Pair Of Key Judgments

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Nov, 2015 11:28 AM
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada says people who helped migrants enter Canada improperly by steering a ship, acting as a lookout or cooking meals cannot automatically be branded as human smugglers.
     
    In a unanimous judgment Friday, the court ruled in favour of several Tamils who arrived in British Columbia in 2010 aboard the MV Sun Sea, a rickety boat carrying 492 passengers.
     
    While on the ship, they helped out by performing routine tasks.
     
    The court says they are entitled to new refugee hearings after initially being declared inadmissible to Canada for engaging in people smuggling.
     
    They can escape being barred from Canada under the relevant provision of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act "if they merely aided in the illegal entry of other refugees or asylum-seekers in the course of their collective flight to safety," the Supreme Court said.
     
    In a second unanimous ruling, the court ordered new trials for four individuals who were criminally charged with people smuggling after arriving off the coast of Vancouver in 2009 aboard the MV Ocean Lady, which carried 76 Tamil migrants.
     
    The Crown had alleged the four, who were on board the ship, had organized the voyage and served as the captain and chief crew members.
     
    The Supreme Court said the provision of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act under which they were charged was unconstitutional and overly broad.
     
    The Crown's interpretation of the provision would mean "a father offering a blanket to a shivering child, or friends sharing food aboard a migrant vessel, could be subject to prosecution," the judgment said.
     
    The justices found that incompatible with the refugee-protection goals of the federal immigration law.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Human-Rights Complaint Continues To Percolate Against Tim Hortons

    The complainants, employed under the Temporary Foreign Workers Program, argued they were discriminated against because of their race, ancestry and place of origin.

    B.C. Human-Rights Complaint Continues To Percolate Against Tim Hortons

    Advocacy Group Wants Hospitals To Expand Visiting Hours, Says Better For Patients

    When Martin Hinrichs-Pymm was in intensive care last fall after having part of his liver removed to donate to his critically ill mother, there was one thing he wanted most: to have the rest of his family and friends around him 

    Advocacy Group Wants Hospitals To Expand Visiting Hours, Says Better For Patients

    Impact Of Syrian Refugee Promise On Immigration Levels Undetermined: John McCallum

    Impact Of Syrian Refugee Promise On Immigration Levels Undetermined: John McCallum
    he time-sensitive nature of the Liberal commitment to Syrian refugees will dominate the first few months of the government's actions on the immigration file as a whole, the immigration minister says.

    Impact Of Syrian Refugee Promise On Immigration Levels Undetermined: John McCallum

    Mohamed Fahmy Says He Feared Losing Citizenship Because Of New Conservative Law

    Mohamed Fahmy Says He Feared Losing Citizenship Because Of New Conservative Law
    As he languished in an Egyptian prison, Mohamed Fahmy feared he might lose his Canadian citizenship under a controversial and recently enacted law, the since-freed journalist said Monday.

    Mohamed Fahmy Says He Feared Losing Citizenship Because Of New Conservative Law

    Katelynn Sampson Inquest To Hear From Pathologist On Death Of 7-year-old Girl

    Katelynn Sampson Inquest To Hear From Pathologist On Death Of 7-year-old Girl
    The coroner's inquest into the death of seven-year-old Toronto girl at the hands of her guardians is hearing she was once struck so hard that her liver ruptured.

    Katelynn Sampson Inquest To Hear From Pathologist On Death Of 7-year-old Girl

    Andre Noel Denny Pleads Guilty To Manslaughter In Death Of Halifax Gay Rights Activist

    Andre Noel Denny Pleads Guilty To Manslaughter In Death Of Halifax Gay Rights Activist
    A man has pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the fatal beating death of a prominent gay rights activist outside a Halifax bar more than three years ago.

    Andre Noel Denny Pleads Guilty To Manslaughter In Death Of Halifax Gay Rights Activist