Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship

The Canadian Press, 15 Oct, 2015 11:21 AM
    OTTAWA — An Ottawa man jailed for his part in a terrorist conspiracy says a federal move to strip him of Canadian citizenship violates several constitutional guarantees, including his right to vote.
     
    Hiva Alizadeh is the latest to challenge new provisions that allow the government to revoke citizenship from someone convicted of terrorism, treason or espionage — as long as they hold nationality in another country.
     
    In an application to the Federal Court of Canada, the Iranian-born man says the provisions breach the principles of fundamental justice enshrined in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
     
    He also argues taking away his citizenship would improperly deny him the right to vote and prevent him from freely entering and remaining in Canada.
     
    Alizadeh, 36, was sentenced to 24 years in prison upon pleading guilty last year to possessing explosives with intent to do harm.
     
    The custodian and part-time student was arrested in August 2010 along with two other men. Police seized terrorist literature, videos and manuals along with dozens of electronic circuit boards — devices designed to detonate homemade bombs remotely.
     
    The federal Conservatives argue terrorism is a crime so grave that perpetrators are unworthy of holding citizenship. Critics say stripping someone's right to be a citizen is akin to the medieval practice of banishment.
     
    Alizadeh's lawyer, Leo Russomanno, said Wednesday his client was "pretty devastated" by the decision to revoke his citizenship, seeing as he took full responsibility for his crime the day he was sentenced. "He gave an impassioned and heartfelt expression of remorse to the court."
     
    Alizadeh is now effectively being punished twice for the same crime, which is unconstitutional, Russomanno contends.
     
    "Mr. Alizadeh agreed to accept the Crown's offer for 24 years, which is no small sentence. And now they seem to be piling on with this, and it doesn't seem very fair."
     
    Alizadeh could face deportation to Iran, a country where he faced persecution as an ethnic Kurd before attaining refugee status in Canada.
     
    His case will proceed in tandem with those of several other convicted terrorists challenging the citizenship revocation provisions.
     
    The B.C. Civil Liberties Association, the Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers and Asad Ansari, who was convicted for his role in a 2006 bomb plot, are spearheading the process.  
     
    Misbahuddin Ahmed, found guilty of conspiring with Alizadeh, is among those contesting the provisions.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Flu-Monitoring Program Seeks B.C. Health Practitioners To Evaluate Illnesses

    Flu-Monitoring Program Seeks B.C. Health Practitioners To Evaluate Illnesses
    Health care practitioners are urged to join the Canadian Sentinel Practitioner Surveillance Network, which has sites in Alberta, Ontario and Quebec.

    Flu-Monitoring Program Seeks B.C. Health Practitioners To Evaluate Illnesses

    Seniors Advocate Says B.C. Must Connect More Seniors With Respite Relief

    A new report by Isobel Mackenzie says the government needs to do a better job connecting seniors and their unpaid caregivers with programs set up to offer relief.

    Seniors Advocate Says B.C. Must Connect More Seniors With Respite Relief

    Yaman Alqadri, Syrian Woman Subjected To Beatings And Electric Shocks For Opposing Assad Regime

    Yaman Alqadri, Syrian Woman Subjected To Beatings And Electric Shocks For Opposing Assad Regime
    Yaman Alqadri still remembers the emotionally draining and painful moments she suffered in the months before her arrival in Canada from Syria in April 2012. 

    Yaman Alqadri, Syrian Woman Subjected To Beatings And Electric Shocks For Opposing Assad Regime

    Security Firms Dealing With Uptick In Oilfield Theft, Vandalism Amid Downturn

    Security Firms Dealing With Uptick In Oilfield Theft, Vandalism Amid Downturn
    Oilfield security firms say they've been dealing with more troublemakers in recent months with the crude price cratering and bringing drilling activity and jobs down with it.

    Security Firms Dealing With Uptick In Oilfield Theft, Vandalism Amid Downturn

    Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus

    Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus
    The 15-year-old defendant is accused of pushing the older boy under the wheels of a moving school bus outside Sydney Academy last winter.

    Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus

    Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force

    Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force
    A report of an aircraft distress call that prompted officials to close part of the Trans-Canada Highway in Alberta for a possible emergency landing has turned out to be false.

    Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force