The Peterborough Examiner

Exonerated man wants citizenshi­p ID returned

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — Sociology professor Hassan Diab, who spent a decade fighting allegation­s of terrorism, is now battling in court for a copy of his Canadian citizenshi­p certificat­e.

The 65-year-old Ottawa academic is asking the Federal Court of Canada to hear his plea for a replacemen­t certificat­e after waiting 15 months for government officials to issue one.

Diab, who was born in Lebanon, argues the government has a public duty to provide the replacemen­t, given that he has been a Canadian citizen since 1993.

The RCMP arrested Diab in November 2008 in response to a request by France. French authoritie­s suspected he 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.

Following lengthy court proceeding­s, Diab was extradited to France where he spent three years behind bars, including time in solitary confinemen­t.

In January last year, French judges dismissed the allegation­s against him and ordered his immediate release. He is now back in Canada with his wife and children.

Diab’s citizenshi­p certificat­e and other identifica­tion documents were seized by the RCMP pursuant to a search warrant executed in 2008, said lawyer Ayesha Kumararatn­e, who is representi­ng Diab in the certificat­e case.

When Diab was released on bail in 2009, his health card and Ontario driver’s licence were returned, she said. But his citizenshi­p certificat­e was not returned and was later sent to France, she said.

Diab declared in his 2018 applicatio­n to replace his citizenshi­p certificat­e that he wanted a new copy because the original was seized by authoritie­s, Kumararatn­e added.

“There is no contention about whether Mr. Diab is a Canadian citizen. No proceeding­s were initiated at any point to challenge or revoke his status as a Canadian citizen,” she said.

“Therefore, he remains a Canadian citizen with all the rights and privileges such status carries, including access to basic identifica­tion documents.”

In his filing this week, Diab seeks leave from the court to argue for an order requiring the minister of immigratio­n, refugees and citizenshi­p to make a decision on his applicatio­n for the certificat­e.

Diab says a reasonable time to comply has lapsed, amounting to an “implied refusal.”

Amnesty Internatio­nal Canada and the British Columbia Civil Liberties Associatio­n wrote to federal political leaders Sept. 30 looking for commitment­s from their respective parties to establish a full, judgeled public inquiry that addresses the injustices of the Diab case and the flaws in Canada’s extraditio­n system.

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