Truro News

High-risk environmen­t

Accused in Lindhout kidnapping faces trial nine years after events

- By Jim Bronskill

More than nine years after journalist Amanda Lindhout was taken hostage in Somalia, a man will face trial today in an Ottawa courtroom.

Three weeks have been set aside for the Ontario Superior Court trial of Ali Omar Ader, to be heard without a jury.

Lindhout and photograph­er Nigel Brennan were grabbed by masked gunmen near strife-ridden Mogadishu in August 2008. Both were released Nov. 25, 2009.

Ader, a 40-year-old Somalian national, faces a criminal charge of hostage-taking for his alleged role as a negotiator.

He was arrested by the RCMP in Ottawa in June 2015. It emerged during pre-trial motions last spring that the Mounties had lured Ader to Canada through an elaborate scheme to sign a purported book-publishing deal.

The Crown opted for a direct indictment in the case, meaning there was no preliminar­y inquiry.

In general, there are many reasons why a direct indictment may be preferable, including cases in which the age, health or other circumstan­ces of witnesses would make it difficult for them to testify more than once.

Behind the scenes, a confidenti­al side proceeding has played out in the Federal Court of Canada over prosecutio­n service concerns about sensitive informatio­n that, if disclosed during the trial, could harm internatio­nal relations, security or defence.

Trevor Brown, an Ottawa lawyer representi­ng Ader, did not respond to requests for comment.

Lindhout, 36, has published a best-selling memoir of her 460 days as a prisoner in which she Ali Omar Ader is shown in court in a 2015 artist’s sketch. More than nine years after journalist Amanda Lindhout was taken hostage in Somalia, Ader will face trial today in an Ottawa courtroom.

discusses being sexually assaulted in captivity.

In 2009, the native of Red Deer, Alta., establishe­d The Global Enrichment Foundation, a nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to fostering leadership in Somalia through educationa­l and community-based programs.

In recent years she has also written articles and given speeches focusing on forgivenes­s, compassion, social responsibi­lity and determinat­ion.

Details of the lengthy police investigat­ion — which involved

undercover operations, surveillan­ce and wiretaps — will emerge in court, RCMP Asst. Commission­er James Malizia said after Ader was charged.

“This investigat­ion posed a number of significan­t challenges as it was carried out in an extremely high-risk environmen­t in a country plagued with political instabilit­y.”

The RCMP’s mandate extends beyond Canada’s borders, where the extra-territoria­l provisions of the Criminal Code come into effect. The Mounties have acknowledg­ed

the help of the Canada Border Services Agency, Foreign Affairs and the Australian Federal Police.

Malizia has also lauded Lindhout, Brennan and their families for their courage and for providing witness statements that assisted the police investigat­ion.

“The RCMP fully understand­s that criminal investigat­ions and the ensuing prosecutio­ns are difficult,” he said. “Victims and witnesses must relive events that they should not have had to endure in the first place.”

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CP PHOTO

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