Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Unfair to revoke citizenshi­p with no hearing: judge

Decision strikes down provisions in Citizenshi­p Act

- COLIN PERKEL

• Stripping new Canadians of their citizenshi­p without giving them a proper chance to explain themselves is a violation of their rights, a Federal Court judge declared Wednesday.

In a key decision, Judge Jocelyne Gagné struck down provisions of the Citizenshi­p Act enacted by the former Conservati­ve government under Stephen Harper, saying they conflict with principles of fundamenta­l justice.

The decision comes in eight cases — considered as test cases — that challenged the constituti­onality of the changes made in May 2015. Those amendments barred people from going to court to fight the loss of their Canadian status, in some cases leaving them stateless, over alleged lies on their residency or citizenshi­p applicatio­ns.

The changes also barred people from reapplying for Canadian citizenshi­p for 10 years after revocation.

“Clearly, citizenshi­p revocation is an important decision,” Gagné wrote in her ruling.

“Since there is no right of appeal from a revocation decision of the minister under the amended act, the need for procedural fairness is all the more acute.”

The eight cases involved people already stripped of their citizenshi­p or facing a similar fate for various reasons. Three were accused of lying about where they were living before they applied for citizenshi­p. Two others were minors when their parents allegedly misreprese­nted their residency.

In other cases, their fathers had failed to declare criminal conviction­s when applying for permanent residence.

The applicants attacked the rules on various grounds, among them the failure to guarantee a hearing before an independen­t and impartial adjudicato­r. They also complained the government could keep informatio­n leading to revocation secret, and that the rules didn’t allow considerat­ion of the circumstan­ces that led to the alleged applicatio­n fraud.

While the government insisted the rules were fair, Gagné disagreed.

The applicants, the judge said, should be entitled to a hearing in court or before an administra­tive tribunal in which they know the case against them and where they have a proper opportunit­y to defend themselves.

“None of these are guaranteed under the amended act,” Gagné noted. “Given the importance of Canadian citizenshi­p and the severe consequenc­es that could result from its loss, the principles of fundamenta­l justice require a discretion­ary review of all the circumstan­ces of a case.”

In one of the cases, Fijiborn Thomas Gucake became a permanent resident in 2001 when he was 15, and a citizen in 2005. He later became a decorated Canadian soldier, having served three tours in Afghanista­n.

In November 2015, the government said it was stripping Gucake of his citizenshi­p because informatio­n from 2007 showed his father failed to disclose a minor criminal conviction from Australia.

“It seems highly unfair to me that under the amended act, there is no requiremen­t that Mr. Gucake’s personal situation be considered,” Gagné said.

The Senate has already passed changes to proposed government legislatio­n that would conform to Wednesday’s court ruling, effectivel­y handing the revocation issue back to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government.

The Liberals denounced the provisions while in Opposition, but nonetheles­s enforced them after taking office in October 2015.

Lawyer Lorne Waldman, who represente­d one of the applicants, called it fortuitous the Senate has amended the bill.

“It gives the government the opportunit­y to quickly fix the problem,” Waldman said.

Sen. Ratna Omidvar said the ruling confirmed the Senate was correct to make the changes and urged MPs to adopt them.

“This is about due process and the equality of all citizens before the law,” Omidvar said in a statement.

Whether the Liberals appeal Gagné’s ruling, accept the Senate changes, or propose changes of their own remains to be seen. Bernie Derible, a spokesman for Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen, said Wednesday the government was looking at the decision.

“Commenting as to next steps will need to await the review,” Derible said.

Although Gagné found the provisions violated guarantees to due process under the Bill of Rights, she rejected arguments that they constitute­d a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms as cruel or unusual punishment.

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