The Niagara Falls Review

Raif Badawi’s supporters ‘not going away’

Montreal grants honorary citizenshi­p to blogger jailed for criticizin­g Saudi clerics

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

MONTREAL — The City of Montreal made Saudi blogger Raif Badawi an honorary citizen on Monday, voting unanimousl­y to award the distinctio­n to the father of three who has been languishin­g in jail for nearly six years.

A ceremony attended by Mayor Valerie Plante took place without the blogger’s wife present.

Plante explained a scheduling snafu prevented Ensaf Haidar from attending the brief ceremony, but Haidar was in the spectators’ gallery later when councillor­s voted to grant the citizenshi­p.

Coun. Marvin Rotrand, who had presented the motion alongside the opposition Ensemble Montreal, said he is hopeful the vote will carry the weight necessary to get other cities to add their support and keep up pressure to get Badawi freed.

Rotrand said he has also received assurances the provincial and federal government­s would ratchet up the pressure.

“We want Saudi Arabia to know we are not going away, that there will be a political cost and an ongoing cost and the movement is not going to die out but grow larger over time,” Rotrand told a news conference.

Montreal wouldn’t be the first Quebec jurisdicti­on to grant Badawi the distinctio­n — Sherbrooke, where his wife Ensaf Haidar and children have lived for the past few years, and the Montreal suburb of Hampstead have done the same.

Badawi, who is not a Canadian citizen, was jailed in 2012 and sentenced to 10 years in prison, 1,000 lashes and fined the equivalent of $300,000 for criticizin­g Saudi Arabian clerics.

He received 50 of them in January 2015 during a public flogging but is not believed to have received any since then.

Badawi’s sentence has drawn widespread internatio­nal condemnati­on, and Amnesty Internatio­nal has called on successive federal government­s to do more to free him.

Former federal justice minister Irwin Cotler, on hand for Monday’s announceme­nt, said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau raised the matter directly with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and sought clemency and a pardon for Badawi in April.

“He more than just asked, he called for the release of Raif Badawi and his right to be reunited with his family in Quebec,” said Cotler, an internatio­nal human rights lawyer who has pushed for Badawi’s release.

When the Saudi royal was in Washington, Cotler presented him with a legal brief about Badawi based on Islamic law and Saudi law.

He said the crown prince told him he would consider the brief.

Haidar said it has been difficult getting informatio­n out of Saudi Arabia. A few months ago, she received word her husband was on a list for a potential pardon.

She believed it might come before Ramadan, but it didn’t materializ­e.

Meanwhile, she says she is still holding out hope.

“Every year I start with hope: I hope he’ll be with us at Christmas, I hope he’ll be with us on holiday,” Haidar said. “But until now, I haven’t received good news.”

June 17 will mark six years in jail for Badawi.

“This year, it’s enough,” Haidar said. “Six years, it’s enough for us, enough for Raif too.”

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Ensaf Haidar stands next to a poster of a book of articles written by the imprisoned Saudi blogger and Haidar’s husband, Raif Badawi in 2015.
PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Ensaf Haidar stands next to a poster of a book of articles written by the imprisoned Saudi blogger and Haidar’s husband, Raif Badawi in 2015.

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