IMMIGRATION: Citizenship check too slow for woman stuck in Kenya
IMMIGRATION: Citizenship check too slow for woman stuck in Kenya
There are two main reasons that Canadians should be greatly concerned about the case of Suaad Mohamud Haji, the Toronto woman who has been stuck in Kenya for the past eight weeks because Canadian officials do not believe that she looks like the person photographed in her Canadian passport.
Firstly, this case demonstrates once again how little our government is willing to do to assist Canadians, or in this case those claiming to be Canadians, when they get into trouble abroad.
In 2002, Maher Arar was shipped off to Syria by the Americans for a little questioning and torture. Our government did little to help him until he made it back here and sued. In the same year, a 15-year-old Canadian-born Omar Khadr was shot and partially blinded by American forces and has been held without trial since then without our government even asking that he be tried quickly or returned home.
Last month, the Federal Court had to order our government to issue a passport to Abousfian Abdelrazik, a Canadian citizen who was stuck in Sudan for six years while trying to get back to Canada but couldn’t because our government refused to issue him a passport.
It is clear that our government’s actions have seriously diminished the sense of security we once had when we held a Canadian passport in our hands.
The second reason we should be concerned is that the Haji case suggests that notwithstanding the many advances in technology since 9/11, when you get right down to it, our border security appears to depend on some border officer’s conclusion, “Gee, I guess that looks like you”.
Border officials have the training and tools to determine fairly quickly if a passport has been tampered with. If it seems genuine, but possibly fraudulently obtained, our border officials should be able to gain access to the photographs, fingerprints and details submitted in connection with the application for that document. With all of the money we have spent on border security, at a minimum, we should have these capabilities in fairly short order.
In this case, when doubts about Haji’s identity surfaced, our officials didn’t seem to have the wherewithal to ask her to submit to a fingerprint comparison. On the contrary, she had to beg to be fingerprinted. She was finally tested on July 9th …and still no results have been announced.
Whether Haji is lying or telling the truth is irrelevant. What is important is that we should be able to tell quickly. In these modern times, this shouldn’t take anywhere near eight weeks. Shouldn’t proof already exist in some computer somewhere that we can check? Doesn’t our border security demand that it does?
It remains to be seen if this delay demonstrates the limits of our government’s forensic abilities or if it just provides yet more proof our government’s disregard for the rights of Canadian citizens to return home.
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Guidy Mamann practices law in Toronto at Mamann, Sandaluk and is certified by the Law Society of Upper Canada as an immigration specialist. Reach him confidentially at 416-862-0000 or at reporter@migrationlaw.com.
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