The Niagara Falls Review

Diplomacy crucial if Canadians detained

- Postmedia Network

For the second time this month, the country is heaving a sigh of relief over release of a Canadian unjustly detained in a foreign jail.

This week, ailing Montreal academic Homa Hoodfar was freed by Iran on humanitari­an grounds after more than 100 days in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison while she was being investigat­ed for “dabbling in feminism and security matters.”

The 65-year-old Hoodfar, who suffers from a chronic condition, landed in Oman, where she was to receive medical attention before flying on to London to meet loved ones.

Hoodfar’s release follows that of Kevin Garratt, jailed in China for two years on suspicion of espionage. He was reunited with his family in Vancouver two weeks ago, shortly after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau returned from China and before the arrival of Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in Canada.

In both cases, high-level interventi­on by Canadian officials appears to have been key after lengthy behind-the-scenes diplomacy.

Garratt’s detention had been an irritant as Canada and China seek to forge stronger ties.

Similarly, Hoodfar’s release was facilitate­d by Iranian authoritie­s who “understand that cases like these impede more productive relations,” Trudeau said. Canada broke off diplomatic relations with Iran in 2012, but in wake of the internatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran and election of a new government in Ottawa, there has been talk of resuming ties.

Canada had to call upon allies to press Hoodfar’s case. But a meeting between Global Affairs Minister Stéphane Dion and his Iranian counterpar­t at the UN last week may have helped seal the deal.

The high-level attention stands in contrast to the case of Mohamed Fahmy. The Canadian journalist spent more than 400 days in an Egyptian prison before being deported a year ago. Fahmy was sharply critical of former prime minister Stephen Harper’s slowness reaching out to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi directly, especially after Australia secured freedom of his colleague Peter Greste with calls from Prime Minister Tony Abbott.

Diplomacy doesn’t always end well. Montreal photojourn­alist Zahra Kazemi was tortured and killed in Iranian custody in 2003 despite Canadian advocacy.

But Canadian officials, from the PM on down, have a moral duty to defend rights of citizens unfairly held abroad, as well as to do all they can to help non-citizens.

Public pressure plays a major role in individual cases. Hoodfar’s family, friends and colleagues also deserve credit for pulling out all stops in drawing national — even worldwide — attention to her plight.

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