Medicine Hat News

Four Canadian men being held in Syria ask Supreme Court to revisit request for hearing

- JIM BRONSKILL

Four Canadian men detained in Syria are asking the Supreme Court of Canada to reconsider pleas for a hearing that could open the door to their freedom.

In November, the top court declined to hear the men’s challenge of a Federal Court of Appeal ruling that said Ottawa is not obligated under the law to repatriate them.

Following its usual custom, the court gave no reasons for refusing to examine the matter.

In a fresh notice filed with the top court, lawyers for the men say exceedingl­y rare circumstan­ces warrant another look at the applicatio­n for leave to appeal.

The detained Canadians are among the many foreign nationals in ramshackle detention centres run by Kurdish forces that reclaimed the war-ravaged region from militant group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

Jack Letts, one of the Canadian men, became a devoted Muslim as a teenager, went on holiday to Jordan, then studied in Kuwait before winding up in Syria.

The identities of the other three are not publicly known.

In the original applicatio­n to the top court, lawyers for the men said their clients had been arbitraril­y detained for several years without charge or trial.

“They are imprisoned in severely overcrowde­d and unsanitary conditions, with at least one Canadian being held with 30 other men in a cell built for six. They lack adequate food and medical attention and one of the applicants reported to Canadian government officials that he had been tortured.”

The lawyers said the men’s foreign jailers would release them if Canada made the request and facilitate­d their repatriati­on, as it had done for some Canadian women and children.

In the notice, counsel say there is a “constituti­onal imperative” for the top court to agree to hear a case when the evidence reveals issues of public importance grounded in serious breaches of basic human rights.

Recent evidence indicates Canada will not repatriate the men, the notice says. As a result, they are consigned to “indefinite and arbitrary detention in cruel and life-threatenin­g conditions, in a region which is increasing­ly dangerous and unstable.”

The Supreme Court is at the “apex of the Canadian judicial system,” and its refusal to hear the appeal “constitute­s a failure of its guardiansh­ip role,” it says.

“This is compounded in the internatio­nal context where the issue of a state’s responsibi­lity to assist a severely distressed and vulnerable citizen is recognized as an evolving area of internatio­nal human-rights law.”

In an affidavit filed with the notice, former Amnesty Internatio­nal Canada secretary general Alex Neve says the case raises novel, unsettled humanright­s issues that affect all Canadians and could influence practices in other countries.

Neve, who was part of a civil society delegation that visited Syrian prison camps last summer, says it has “proven frustratin­g” for advocates seeking clarity from Global Affairs Canada about its position on assistance to the remaining detainees.

The men won a battle in the protracted fight in January 2023 when Federal Court Justice Henry Brown directed Ottawa to request their repatriati­on from the squalid conditions as soon as possible and to supply passports or emergency travel documents.

Brown said the men were also entitled to have a representa­tive of the federal government travel to Syria to help their release take place once the captors agreed to hand them over.

 ?? CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK ?? The Supreme Court of Canada is pictured in Ottawa in this March 2023 file photo.
CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK The Supreme Court of Canada is pictured in Ottawa in this March 2023 file photo.

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