Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Judge reserves decision in emergency hearing to halt N.S. child refugee deportation

WATCH: A judge has reserved his decision about whether or not to temporarily stop the deportation of a man who came to Canada as a child but never became a Canadian citizen. Natasha Pace reports – Feb 15, 2018

A Federal Court judge has reserved his decision after hearing an emergency request to temporarily stop the deportation of former Somali child refugee Abdoul Abdi.

Story continues below advertisement

Abdi, who never got Canadian citizenship while growing up in foster care in Nova Scotia, was detained by the Canada Border Services Agency after serving five years in prison for multiple offences, including aggravated assault.

READ: Emergency request to halt Abdoul Abdi deportation to be heard in Federal Court in Halifax

Abdi’s lawyer, Benjamin Perryman, says federal officials turned down the 24-year-old’s request to press pause on a deportation hearing while he pursues a constitutional challenge.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

Abdi then asked the Federal Court to temporarily halt the deportation hearing – scheduled for March 7 – and Perryman made arguments on his behalf in Halifax today.

Perryman argued proceeding with a deportation hearing while Abdi’s constitutional challenge is ongoing will cause irreparable harm.

WATCH: ‘It’s really unfair’: Abdoul Abdi’s sister speaks out ahead of emergency hearing to stop deportation

He says the Immigration Division hearing will inevitably lead to a deportation order given the circumstances of Abdi’s case, and he would no longer be able to work – one of the conditions of his release.

Story continues below advertisement

Heidi Collicutt, a lawyer for the federal government, told Justice Keith Boswell that Abdi’s request presupposes an unfavourable outcome at the immigration admissibility hearing, and it would not be appropriate to stop an independent body from carrying out its statutory mandate.

Boswell reserved his decision, but said he would rule before the hearing next month.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article