Montreal Gazette

Feds settle claim over ‘grossly unfair’ leak

Government was ‘grossly unfair,’ lawsuit claimed

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA • The federal government has quietly settled the lawsuit of a Montreal man who complained he was smeared by inflammato­ry and false accusation­s about extremist activities.

It is the latest twist in the saga of Abousfian Abdelrazik, who denies any involvemen­t in terrorism. Abdelrazik, 55, reached a “satisfacto­ry settlement” with the government over a 2011 disclosure intended to discredit him, said Paul Champ, his lawyer.

The informatio­n appeared in an August 2011 La Presse article based on secret documents and was subsequent­ly reported by national and internatio­nal media outlets.

Terms of the settlement are confidenti­al. However, Abdelrazik’s statement of claim, filed in Federal Court in 2013 and amended the following year, sought financial compensati­on. Justice Department spokeswoma­n Francoise Trudeau-Reeves confirmed the settlement but declined to discuss details.

The RCMP’s criminal investigat­ion into the leak continues, said spokeswoma­n Cpl. Annie Delisle.

Abdelrazik’s lawsuit said the only people who could have leaked the “selective and grossly unfair” secret documents in question were Canadian government officials.

In a statement of defence filed with the Federal Court, the government denied the allegation­s and any responsibi­lity for the leak. It said the informatio­n published by La Presse was generally already on the public record through media reports and court documentat­ion.

Abdelrazik came from Africa as a refugee in 1990 and attained Canadian citizenshi­p five years later. He was arrested but not charged during a 2003 visit to see his ailing mother in Sudan. While in custody, he was interrogat­ed by the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service about suspected extremist links.

Abdelrazik claims he was tortured by Sudanese intelligen­ce officials during two periods of detention, but Canada says it knew nothing of the alleged abuse. After Abdelrazik’s second release from prison, in July 2006, his name turned up on a United Nations Security Council blacklist that prevented him from flying back to Canada.

He was granted haven in the Canadian consulate in Khartoum, but Canada refused to issue him a travel document. He returned to Montreal in June 2009. That same month, the Federal Court of Canada concluded CSIS was complicit in Abdelrazik’s 2003 detention.

The 2011 leak came as Abdelrazik was petitionin­g to have his name removed from the UN blacklist and “someone in the government felt it was an opportune moment to smear Mr. Abdelrazik in this public way,” Champ said.

Abdelrazik’s name was removed from the UN list in late 2011. In a separate lawsuit Abdelrazik seeks compensati­on and an apology from the federal government for his Sudan ordeal.

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