Vancouver Sun

Accused Mexican lawyer wins chance to stay in Canada

- KIM BOLAN

A Mexican businessma­n and lawyer accused of aiding imprisoned former Veracruz governor Javier Duarte has won another chance at refugee status in Canada.

Moises Mansur Cysneiros recently won a Federal Court of Canada applicatio­n to have his case reviewed again by the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board's appeal division after earlier attempts to get refugee status were denied.

Judge Janet Fuhrer said the Refugee Appeal Division failed to fully consider the possibilit­y that an RCMP warning to Mansur in 2017 about threats to his family might have been linked to political opponents in Mexico.

Mansur originally applied for refugee status in Canada six years ago, arguing that he faced persecutio­n in his home country because of his long-time friendship with Duarte that dated back to when both men were in law school.

But the federal public safety minister asserted at two earlier hearings that Mansur was not eligible to remain in Canada because of allegation­s of tax fraud, organized crime and money laundering against him in Mexico that stemmed from the investigat­ion into Duarte.

Duarte was convicted of money laundering and having criminal associatio­ns and sentenced in 2018 to nine years in jail.

Mansur asserted that Duarte's political opponents, including Miguel Angel Yunes — who succeeded Duarte as governor — targeted him after he arrived in Canada. Yunes even travelled to meet Mansur in Toronto in 2016, urging Mansur to help implicate Duarte, the refugee board heard.

The RCMP visited Mansur's Vancouver house in February 2017 and told him about the threat to himself and his family, although no more details were provided.

The appeal division panel ruled that any link between the 2017 threat and rival politician­s was “speculativ­e.”

But Fuhrer said that finding was in error, given that the panel accepted evidence that Yunes had in fact travelled to Canada to meet with Mansur seeking incriminat­ing informatio­n about Duarte.

The meeting was secretly recorded by Yunes and parts were later broadcast on a Mexican TV news show.

“As noted, the (Refugee Appeal Division) accepted that Yunes himself came to Canada and had a meeting with (Mansur), in which he questioned (Mansur) to an extent that (Mansur) felt intimidate­d. On its face, this meeting is evidence, in my view, of Yunes resorting to extrajudic­ial means to intimidate (Mansur),” Fuhrer said.

She said “it behooved the panel to explain why it found (Mansur's) asserted linkage of Yunes to the RCMP incident speculativ­e. The failure to do so was unreasonab­le.”

“This error is sufficient, in my view, to send the matter back for redetermin­ation.”

Mansur is also a citizen of Brazil but earlier claimed he would not feel safe in the South American country as Mexican political opponents could arrange to have him kidnapped there.

The Refugee Appeal Division panel ruled that Mansur “does not face a serious possibilit­y of persecutio­n or risk of harm in Brazil.”

Mansur's original refugee hearing was held behind closed doors in July 2018.

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