Citing bias, court orders review of deported Libyan family
Father who was tortured in Gadhafi's Libya lived in Canada for 8 years
By Maureen Brosnahan, CBC News
Posted: Nov 20, 2012 5:29 AM ET
Last Updated: Nov 20, 2012 12:38 PM ET
Adam and Omar Benhmuda, from the petition sponsored by their Mississauga school friends and neighbours. Born and raised in Canada. (Benhmuda family )
Related
Related Stories
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
Canadian immigration officials say they will comply with a Federal Court order to review the case of a family that was deported four years ago to Moammar Gadhafi's Libya, where the father was imprisoned and tortured in that country's notorious Ain Zara jail.
Adel Benhmuda, his wife Aisha Benmatug and their four sons, two of whom were born in Canada, were sent back to Libya when their claim for refugee status was denied.
Upon their arrival in Tripoli, Adel Benhmuda was taken into custody by Libyan police and spent the next four months in Ain Zara prison where he was tortured.
In a scathing decision late last month, Judge Mary Gleason ruled that visa officials at Canada's embassy in Rome were biased in their assessment of the family's application to return to Canada and had placed erroneous information on their file.
She ordered that the information be expunged and that the case be sent to another visa post for reassessment within 90 days.
"It really highlights some of the rogue nature of what goes on at visa posts around the world," said Andrew Brouwer, the family's lawyer in Toronto. Some officer "had the power to go directly against what everyone was saying including the United Nations."
Brouwer called the decision strong and decisive, adding, "I really think that Justice Gleason was so appalled by what had happened that she stepped a little bit outside of what judges normally do in these cases."
Eight years in Canada
The Benhmuda family had originally come to Canada in 2000, saying they felt threatened by Libyan authorities because Benhmuda's brother was linked to a group that opposed the Gadhafi regime.
Aisha Benmatug (Benhmuda) with her sons in front of a container with their possessions at a refugee camp in Malta, where the family is currently living. (Courtesy Benhmuda family)But eight years later, following a series of hearings, immigration authorities rejected their claim and three weeks after that they were deported to Libya, even though the two youngest boys had been born in Canada.
In an interview with CBC Radio last year, Adul Benhmuda described how he was tortured. "They used to hit me," he said. "A kind of rope and wood stick. They wrapped my feet up and starting hitting them. That was several times a week."
After his release, the family paid a bribe and fled to Malta, where they lived in a refugee camp for almost two years. There they were recognized by the UN High Commission for Refugees as legitimate refugees.
When UNHCR officials saw that two of their sons were Canadian, they asked Canada to take them back. and last year Immigration Minister Jason Kenney said Canadian authorities would do everything they could to help the family and promised authorities would offer "every humanitarian consideration."
But a visa officer with the Canadian embassy in Rome, Laurent Beaulieu, had a much different take.
He alleged that the family had been a drain on Canada's health and social service system and would again be dependent on social assistance, a suggestion Judge Gleason said was wrong.
During his initial time in Canada, Benhmuda had a job with an optician and had supported his family.
The judge also said that "officer Beaulieu additionally ignored the fact that the family was relying on circumstances that had not been considered by [the refugee review process], including the incarceration and torture of Mr. Benhmuda by the Libyan authorities.
"The analysis also fails to discuss the applicants' request for [humanitarian] consideration, the situation in Malta, the family’s ties to Canada and the children's best interests.
It also contains gratuitous comments, like the mention that Ms. Benmatug 'was already in advance state of pregnancy' when the family first sought refuge in Canada," Judge Gleason wrote.
"Citizenship and Immigration Canada "will of course comply with the ruling," Remi Lariviere, a spokesperson for Immigration Minister Kenney, said in a statement to CBC News. "Instructions have been sent to a different visa office as ordered by the court."
But Lariviere said he could not say which office would now handle the case due to privacy restrictions.
Neighbours petition
The family is now living a hand-to-mouth existence in a small apartment in Malta, and Adel is unable to work, according to Brouwer.
He says that after what the family has been through, their reaction to this latest decision was muted, as if they didn't want to get their hopes up again.
In the meantime, a Mississauga teacher who taught the family's two youngest boys, Adam and Omar, has set up an online petition urging the federal government to bring the family back to Canada as soon as possible.
Ingrid Kerrigan says she was "shocked" when immigration officials turned down the family's claim to remain in Canada.
The Benhmuda family's lawyer, Andrew Brouwer, says the court's decision shows the 'rogue nature of what goes on at visa posts around the world.' (Courtesy Andrew Brouwer)"Aisha phoned me and she was devasted," she said. "They hadn't believed that her husband Adel was in danger if they sent them back to Libya and I was absolutely floored. We trusted the system to do the right thing this time and it didn't work for whatever reason."
Kerrigan and others in the school and neighborhood raised money to hire a lawyer to try to get the family back.
"They want more than anything to come home," Kerrigan said. "All any of their four sons knows is Canada. That's where all their memories are, their childhood, it's where their best friends are still waiting for them.
"They miss snow, they miss hockey, they miss skating, all those Canadian things."
This month Kerrigan launched the petition on change.org and in less than two weeks, more than 10,000 people have signed the petition.
"We have to show the world that we're a caring and compassionate nation that warrants the international respect that we've earned by doing what's right and just bringing the family home," she said. "They didn't deserve to be deported in the first place."
In an interview with CBC News from Malta, Adel Benhmuda says he is overwhelmed by the support from all his Canadian friends.
"I hope it will be helpful," he said. In the meantime, he said they are trying to remain hopeful that they can return and resume their life in Canada.
The federal government has until mid-January to review the family's case and make a decision.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Neil Macdonald: Washington's obsession with leakers
- Julian Assange and Edward Snowden are just the most prominent targets in an all-out legal and propaganda campaign that America's security apparatus is mounting against leakers everywhere, Neil Macdonald writes. more »
- Half of First Nations children live in poverty
- Half of status First Nations children in Canada live in poverty, a troubling figure that jumps to nearly two-thirds in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, says a newly released report. more »
- Who's who in the Senate expense controversy
- Keeping track of the names popping up in the ongoing Senate expenses controversy — from the investigators to the four senators themselves — could be a difficult task for even the most seasoned political observers. more »
- How open is Ottawa's new 'open data' website?
- Treasury Board President Tony Clement is touting the federal government's revamped data portal as a "new natural resource." But that online window for previously published data arrives at the same time the government faces controversy over just how open it really is. more »
Must Watch
Latest Canada News Headlines
- 2 men jailed in Dominican wedding fight return to Canada
- Two Canadian men who were detained in the Dominican Republic for nearly three weeks after a post-wedding fight broke out at a resort have returned to Toronto, the latest step in a drama that the wife of one of the men said was "like a scene from the movies." more »
- How open is Ottawa's new 'open data' website?
- Treasury Board President Tony Clement is touting the federal government's revamped data portal as a "new natural resource." But that online window for previously published data arrives at the same time the government faces controversy over just how open it really is. more »
- Joni Mitchell plays rare performance at Luminato tribute
- After watching a succession of decorated musicians interpret her vast songbook in a celebration of her upcoming 70th birthday, Joni Mitchell took to the Massey Hall stage, kicked off her shoes and gave the adoring audience an unexpected — and exceedingly rare — gift of her own: a public performance. more »
- Montreal scrambles to find new mayor, again
- As their city council searches for an interim mayor, Montrealers are still reeling from the corruption charges laid against a political leader who had pledged to clean up City Hall. more »
The National
The Current
- What happened to Betty Anne Gagnon? Jun. 19, 2013 9:01 AM Betty Anne Gagnon's mental disabilities didn't stop her from finding work, or finding friends. But when she needed it the most, she was unable to find help.
- 2 men jailed in Dominican wedding fight return to Canada
- All-party deal on bills, MP oversight lets House out early
- Are e-cigarettes safe to puff?
- Most groups don't want return of Trudeau speaking fees
- Half of First Nations children live in poverty
- Police probe death of woman, 27, in Kelowna home
- Huge ancient city at Angkor Wat revealed by lasers
- Tim Hortons being circled by Wall Street hedge funds
- Hundreds attend 'Change Brazil' protest in Vancouver

