The Telegram (St. John's)

Court orders new review in Hassan Diab case

- BY LEE BERTHIAUME

The decade-long ordeal of Ottawa academic Hassan Diab, suspected by French authoritie­s of being involved in a deadly bombing in Paris, showed no signs of ending on Friday after an appeal court ordered a fresh review of evidence in the case.

The French Court of Appeal’s decision sparked immediate rebukes from Diab, his lawyer and human-rights groups, as well as fresh calls for Ottawa to launch a public inquiry into Diab’s case and to review the Extraditio­n Act to ensure other Canadians aren’t caught in the same situation.

“It’s long overdue for the Canadian government to seriously reform Canada’s extraditio­n law,” Diab said during a news conference on Parliament Hill.

“The law as it stands is an affront to basic rights, due process and justice and it puts all Canadians at risk of potential, wrongful extraditio­n.”

French authoritie­s have said they suspect Diab, a Canadian of Lebanese descent, 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.

The RCMP arrested Diab in November 2008 in response to a request by France. In June 2011, Ontario Superior Court Justice Robert Maranger committed Diab for extraditio­n despite acknowledg­ing the case against him was weak.

The following year, then justice minister Rob Nicholson signed an extraditio­n order surrenderi­ng Diab to France. In November 2014, Diab was sent to France, where he was held in solitary confinemen­t for up to 22 hours a day.

He spent three years in a French jail, only to be suddenly released earlier this year. In January, French judges dismissed the allegation­s against Diab and ordered his immediate release.

Diab is back in Canada with his wife and children. However, French prosecutin­g authoritie­s appealed his release. While a decision on the appeal was expected on Friday, Diab’s lawyer, Donald Bayne, said the appeal court instead ordered the appointmen­t of a new investigat­ing judge.

It also called for a new analysis of handwritin­g on a hotel registrati­on card that was allegedly penned by Diab and put off any ruling until next year.

Diab’s supporters have long argued he was in Beirut - not Paris - when the attack took place and that his fingerprin­ts, palm prints, physical descriptio­n and age did not match those of the suspect identified in 1980.

 ??  ?? Hassan Diab
Hassan Diab

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