PM signals support for Diab as intervention with France urged
OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau signalled Wednesday that Canada will stand up for an Ottawa sociology professor facing trial in France as human-rights advocates renewed calls for the Liberal government to intervene.
The prime minister’s words left Hassan Diab’s supporters wishing Trudeau had been more forceful in pledging assistance.
In late January, France ordered Diab to stand trial for a decades-old synagogue bombing, a move his lawyer called the latest misstep in a long odyssey of injustice.
The Canadian government has been communicating with officials in France about the case and will continue to do so, Trudeau said during a news briefing Wednesday.
“It has been a priority for us to make sure that we’re standing up for our citizens all around the world, with countries that are challenging, but also with our allies,” he said. “And those conversations will continue.”
Canadians would rightly expect their prime minister and government to stand up for a falsely accused citizen, said Donald Bayne, Diab’s Ottawa lawyer.
“But what does that ambiguous phrase mean?”
Born in Lebanon, Diab became a Canadian citizen in 1993, working in Ottawa as a university teacher.
The RCMP arrested him in November 2008 in response to a request by France.
French authorities suspected Diab was involved in the 1980 bombing of a Paris synagogue that killed four people and injured dozens of
others, an accusation he has consistently denied.
After lengthy proceedings that went all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, Diab was extradited to France, where he spent three years behind bars, including time in solitary confinement.
In January 2018, French judges dismissed the allegations against him for lack of evidence and ordered his immediate release.
Trudeau said later that year that what Diab went through “never should have happened.”
Diab’s supporters have long argued he was in Beirut — not Paris — when the attack took place and that his fingerprints, palm prints, physical description and age did not match those of the suspect identified in 1980.
Earlier this year, Bayne called the French move to have Diab stand trial “a travesty of justice,” saying the latest analysis of handwriting evidence in the case makes the argument for pursuing his client even weaker.
Diab, 67, is now back with his wife and young children in Ottawa as his lawyers in France appeal the latest decision.
Alex Neve, former secretary-general of Amnesty International Canada, said in January it is “cruel and baffling” that French authorities continue to suspect Diab.
Neve said the Canadian government must become involved at the highest political levels and not simply stand aside on the grounds that justice must be allowed to run its course.