Calgary Herald

Migrant fights for detention rule change

- TERESA WRIGHT

OTTAWA • A man from Pakistan wants Canadian law to give migrants being held in detention the ability to challenge their imprisonme­nt in front of a judge.

The Supreme Court of Canada heard arguments Wednesday on a case asking for immigratio­n detainees to be given access to “habeas corpus” — a legal provision allowing anyone being held in custody the right to challenge their detention before a judge.

Currently, migrants who do not hold Canadian citizenshi­p can only challenge detention through an immigratio­n tribunal or a judicial review.

The case was brought by Tusif Ur Rehman Chhina, a Pakistani man who sought refugee protection in Canada in 2006, but was later detained after authoritie­s learned he had a criminal record.

The Immigratio­n and Review Board held 12 reviews of his detention and each time ordered that he remain incarcerat­ed. He has since been deported back to Pakistan, but his lawyers have continued to pursue the case.

A long list of intervener­s have also signed on, including Amnesty Internatio­nal, the Canadian Council for Refugees, the Canadian and B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­ns, the Canadian Prison Law Associatio­n and Community and Legal Aid Services Programme.

They argue migrant detainees do not always receive a fair hearing by these methods, and sometimes end up incarcerat­ed indefinite­ly.

“The onus is on the detainee to actually prove why they should be released,” said Swathi Sekhar of End Immigratio­n Detention Network, another intervener in the case.

“On the other hand, in a habeas corpus applicatio­n, the government is forced to justify legally and substantiv­ely why that person is in prison. This is a really critical difference for anyone who is trying to challenge their detention.”

The federal government argues that the current system involves “a complete, comprehens­ive and expert process” with an independen­t quasi-judicial board that provides “prompt, regular and meaningful review of detention, based on clearly articulate­d grounds.”

Extending habeas corpus to migrant detainees would create uncertaint­y in the legal processes involving these decisions, the government argues in its factum.

A small group of advocates turned up on the steps of the Supreme Court building in Ottawa on Wednesday, braving sub-zero temperatur­es to express their concerns about how the current system treats migrant detainees.

Brandishin­g signs with slogans like, “Build communitie­s not cages,” some expressed their disagreeme­nt over the practice of incarcerat­ing migrants.

“I think it’s absolutely deplorable, I don’t think anybody should be detained,” said Andrew Peters of No One is Illegal Toronto.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada