The Standard (St. Catharines)

Ottawa professor will be tried for bombing

Lawyer says his client a political scapegoat

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — A lawyer for Hassan Diab says a French appeal court’s order that the Ottawa sociology professor stand trial for a decades-old synagogue bombing is the latest misstep in a long odyssey of injustice.

Donald Bayne told a news conference Wednesday the decision delivered in Paris “flies in the face of the existing evidence,” and he suggested French authoritie­s are making Diab a scapegoat.

“A demonstrab­ly innocent man and his family have been enduring this nightmare for 10 years now,” Bayne said.

“He’s going to be dragged through a future of uncertaint­y while for political reasons this case marches on in France.”

Born in Lebanon, Diab became a Canadian citizen in 1993, working in Ottawa as a university teacher. The RCMP arrested him in 2008 in response to a request by France.

French authoritie­s suspected Diab was involved in the 1980 bombing of a Paris synagogue that killed four people and injured dozens of others, an accusation he has always denied.

Following drawn-out proceeding­s that went all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, Diab was extradited to France where he spent three years behind bars, including time in solitary confinemen­t.

In January 2018, French judges dismissed the allegation­s against him and ordered his immediate release.

Bayne called the ruling handed down Wednesday “a travesty of justice,” saying the latest analysis of handwritin­g evidence in the case makes the argument for pursuing Diab even weaker.

Amnesty Internatio­nal Canada and the British Columbia Civil Liberties Associatio­n are among the many groups that have called for a public inquiry into the Diab case and a review of Canada’s extraditio­n system.

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