Lethbridge Herald

Widow seeks answers in airport deportatio­n death

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A lawyer for the family of a Nigerian man who died while he was being deported from Canada says his widow is looking for answers.

Bolanle Idowu Alo, who was 49, died following an altercatio­n with two Canada Border Services Agency officers on an Aug. 7 flight to Amsterdam from Calgary.

His family’s lawyer, Elias Munshya, said Alo’s wife wants to know why her husband died.

“She’s broken, but the biggest question on the family’s mind is how did his death happen?” Munshya said in an interview.

Munshya said he will make inquiries to the Canada Border Services Agency as well as the Calgary Police Service, which is investigat­ing the death.

“We have not gotten any updates yet,” he said. “This case is going to turn on its own facts.”

Munshya said they want to know what happened when he was detained, what happened in detention and what happened on the airplane before he died.

Documents from the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board said Alo, whose first name is listed as Bolante, came to Canada in 2005 and made a refugee claim on humanitari­an and compassion­ate grounds.

He was, however, denied at every stage and ordered removed from Canada in February 2018.

The documents said he had been co-operative with the Canada Border Services Agency, but maintained he didn’t want to return to Nigeria.

“Mr. Alo is adamant that he will face harm if he is returned to Nigeria and has consistent­ly told officers that he will not return to Nigeria on his own and that he would only return if he is forced to,” stated the documents.

Once he was ordered removed, Nigerian High Commission officers interviewe­d Alo and raised concerns that he could become violent.

“Mr. Alo’s statements have increased from statements such as ‘I will not go back’ ... to statements like “You will have to carry me like a dead man because I’m not going to my death,” said one of the CBSA documents.

The documents show Alo was ordered deported on Aug. 7, and the Canada Border Services Agency had a valid emergency travel document and flight with escorts booked.

Calgary police have said they responded to the KLM Royal Dutch Airlines’ plane that had returned to the gate after the altercatio­n around 3 p.m. that afternoon.

Both the agency and police said the man was in medical distress and was taken to hospital, where he was pronounced dead around 4:30 p.m.

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