The Hamilton Spectator

Helmut Oberlander appeals citizenshi­p stripping yet again

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — Helmut Oberlander has launched yet another challenge to his loss of citizenshi­p and potential deportatio­n for lying to Canadian authoritie­s about his membership in a Second World War Nazi death squad.

The notice of appeal from the Waterloo man comes even though a Federal Court judge recently ruled that Ottawa had acted reasonably in the case and limited his ability to appeal.

Lawyers for Oberlander, 94, refused on Friday to discuss the appeal notice filed this week, so the legal underpinni­ngs of their action were not immediatel­y evident.

However, in a letter sent to the court, the federal government made it clear that it objects to the filing. The letter further asks that the Federal Court of Appeal registry forward the appeal notice to the court for review.

Ukraine-born Oberlander, who came to Canada in 1954 and became a citizen six years later, has steadfastl­y maintained he was just 17 when he was forced on pain of execution to join the Nazi death squad Einsatzkom­mando 10a, known as Ek 10a.

The squad was responsibl­e for killing close to 100,000 people, mostly Jewish.

In June 2017, the government revoked the retired businessma­n’s citizenshi­p for the fourth time since the mid-1990s, prompting his current effort to stave off deportatio­n.

Earlier this month, Federal Court Judge Michael Phelan lifted a stay on his earlier decision that the government had been reasonable in stripping citizenshi­p from Oberlander. Phelan found that Oberlander had misreprese­nted his wartime activities even though no evidence existed that he took part in any atrocities. “It is unconteste­d that Oberlander obtained his Canadian citizenshi­p by false representa­tion or by knowingly concealing material circumstan­ces by failing to disclose involvemen­t in the SS at the time of his immigratio­n screening,” Phelan wrote.

“There is no doubt that to have done so would have resulted in the rejection of his citizenshi­p applicatio­n.”

Phelan also refused to “certify a serious question of general importance” that would have allowed Oberlander to appeal the merits of the decision itself under immigratio­n law.

Oberlander may yet be able to persuade the Federal Court of Appeal to hear the case on grounds outside of the Immigratio­n Act but the higher court generally hears only a fraction of cases decided by Federal Court.

In September, Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen said Canada should never be a “safe haven for war criminals and people who’ve been accused of crimes, who’ve committed crimes against humanity.”

 ?? MATHEW MCCARTHY RECORD FILE PHOTO ?? Oberlander’s lawyers plan to appeal his loss of Canadian citizenshi­p.
MATHEW MCCARTHY RECORD FILE PHOTO Oberlander’s lawyers plan to appeal his loss of Canadian citizenshi­p.

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