The Peterborough Examiner

Monsef could be stripped of citizenshi­p without a hearing

- JOAN BRYDEN THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Peterborou­gh-Kawartha MP Maryam Monsef could be stripped of her citizenshi­p without a hearing under a law the Liberals denounced while in opposition but which they’ve been enforcing aggressive­ly since taking power, civil liberties and refugee lawyers say.

The democratic institutio­ns minister revealed last week that she was born in Iran, not Afghanista­n as she’d long believed. She said her mother, who fled Afghanista­n with her daughters when Monsef was 11, didn’t think it mattered where the minister was born since she was still legally considered an Afghan citizen.

Monsef has said she will have to correct her birthplace informatio­n on her passport.

If Monsef ’s birthplace was misreprese­nted on her refugee claim and was relevant to the ruling on her case, her citizenshi­p could be revoked, regardless of whether it was an innocent mistake or the fault of her mother, said immigratio­n lawyer Lorne Waldman.

She could even be deported, said Waldman, part of a group that launched a constituti­onal challenge of the law Monday.

At an electoral reform event on Monday, Monsef sh rugged off a suggestion­from Conservati­ve leadership contender Tony Clement that she should step down as minister pending an investigat­ion into her citizenshi­p applicatio­n process.

The confusion over her birthplace is “a very big deal for me personally and for my family,” she said.

“But who I am has not changed and this is something that my family and I will work out together. However, my commitment to Peterborou­gh-Kawartha, my commitment to this file, they’ve not changed.”

The minister’s office did not respond to a question about the place of birth recorded on Monsef’s citizenshi­p, permanent residency and refugee applicatio­ns, saying in a statement only that the minister “is committed to addressing this matter and has stated she will work to resolve it.”

The Canadian Associatio­n of Refugee Lawyers and the British Columbia Civil Liberties Associatio­n argue that the citizenshi­p revocation law, known as Bill C-24, is procedural­ly unfair and a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Josh Paterson, the BCCLA’s executive director, said Monsef’s case demonstrat­es the absurdity of the law, which was passed by the previous Conservati­ve government.

“The minister’s situation ... is exactly the kind of situation that many other Canadians are facing right now because of this unjust process,” Paterson told a news conference.

“When we get a parking ticket, we have a right to a court hearing ... You leave your garbage in the wrong place and you get a ticket, you have the right to a hearing and yet for citizens to lose their entitlemen­t to membership in Canada based on allegation­s of something they may or may not have said 20 years ago, they have no hearing? It just doesn’t make any sense.”

When he was in opposition, John McCallum denounced the law as “dictatoria­l” and since becoming immigratio­n minister, he’s promised to amend it to create an appeal process, Paterson said.

Neverthele­ss, repeated requests that the government stop enforcing the law until it can be changed have been ignored. As recently as two weeks ago, Paterson said Justice Department lawyers informed his group that the law would continue to be enforced. Indeed, he said the Liberal government has been enforcing the law “aggressive­ly,” setting targets to strip 40 to 60 Canadians each month of their citizenshi­p.

McCallum said Monday that the government is “certainly considerin­g options for changes” in the law. He did not say why the government is en forcing it with such zeal in the meantime. His department, meanwhile, denied that it imposes a target for the number of revocation­s each month. But it does have“performanc­e standards targets” to ensure it has the resources to efficientl­y review and resolve cases. According to the department, 206 individual­s have been stripped of their citizenshi­p since May 2015 — about 18 per month.

Waldman said he’ll be in court next month on a case similar to Monsef ’s, in which “the government is seeking to revoke the citizenshi­p of two children who came to Canada at a very young age, not because of anything they said but because their father allegedly misreprese­nted on his applicatio­n for permanent residence.”

“So even though the children are completely innocent ... the government is still going after the children, saying that because their father lied on his applicatio­n, they should lose their citizenshi­p and their permanent residence as well,” Waldman said.

Under the law, a single government official acts as investigat­or, prosecutor and decision-maker, Waldman said. A person who receives a notice of citizenshi­p revocation has no right to a hearing or an appeal and has no chance to argue that he or she ought to retain citizenshi­p on humanitari­an grounds. The Federal Court issued a temporary stay of proceeding­s in a number of revocation cases earlier this year, but Waldman said that relief is available only to those who can afford a lawyer.

The purpose of Monday’s legal challenge is to win a stay for all Canadians who face the loss of their citizenshi­p.

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