Lia Tarachansky reports on the case of Hassan Diab, a Canadian
citizen who's been fighting extradition to France since 2007. The
French prosecutors compiled a case against him based on secret
intelligence said to be of German and Israeli sources. It alleges his
involvement in a bombing that took place in Paris in 1980. He was
arrested in 2008 and released in 2009 on strict bail conditions,
including having to wear a self-financed GPS tracking device. The
Canadian Extradition Act allows for the requesting country, in this case
France, to submit nothing more than a summary of its evidence before
sending Canadian citizens to face trial abroad. However, Diab's Record
of the Case revealed exonerating and incomplete evidence. After a
lengthy and historic legal battle, Diab's case will finally come to a
decision in March when an Ontario Superior Court judge will rule whether
the evidence presented by France is reliable. This decision could
change Canadian extradition law altogether.
Bio
Gary Botting is a Canadian lawyer specializing in Extradition law. He is also the author of four books on the topic, including Canadian Extradition Law Practice and Halsbury's Laws of Canada - Extradition and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters. He is full bio can be see on his site.
Rania Tfaily is the wife of Hassan Diab, a Canadian
citizen facing extradition to France based on secret intelligence. She
is an assistant professor at Carleton University in Ottawa in the
Department of Sociology and Anthropology
Matthew Behrens is the coordinator of the Campaign to Stop Secret Trials. He is a frequent commentator and often writes for <>Rabble.ca
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LIA TARACHANSKY,
PRODUCER, TRNN: I'm Lia Tarachansky with The Real News in Ottawa,
Canada. As the Ontario Superior Court inches closer towards a final
decision in the extradition case of Hassan Diab, public pressure
intensifies. Hassan Diab is a Canadian citizen and a former professor of
sociology at the University of Ottawa. The French authorities requested
Canada extradite him to France due to allegations he was involved in a
1980 bombing. Canada's extradition act allows the requesting country, in
this case France, to present a record of the case, which is a summary
of the evidence that doesn't require the use of sworn witnesses. Because
of the allegations against Diab, which are largely based on secret
evidence, he was arrested in late 2008, but released in 2009 with strict
bail conditions. He is now waging a legal battle that might change
Canadian extradition law altogether. On this cold Canadian day,
supporters came out to yet another hearing as his court case comes to an
end.
IDA HENDERSON, RETIRED FEDERAL PUBLIC SERVANT:
Well, I think more Canadians should be really aware of this major flaw
in our legal system and in the protection of our rights.
BENJAMIN
SAIFER, PUBLIC SECTOR UNIONIST: If the evidence was really rock-solid
and really put together a strong case against Dr. Hassan Diab, then I
think the evidence could be cross-examined and would be there for his
defense to challenge, would be there for the accused to see.
TARACHANSKY:
On February 7, Hassan Diab's support committee held a panel discussion.
Among the speakers was Rania Tfaily, his wife and an assistant
professor at Carleton University in Otttawa. She describes what it would
be like for someone to go through the case her husband is currently
defending. She talks about how for a year he was followed by agents and
then arrested and detained in solitary confinement.
RANIA
TFAILY, WIFE OF HASSAN DIAB: You spend over four months in detention.
After an unusual six-day hearing, bail hearing, along with the
testimonies of five sureties, and character letters from numerous
academics, you are released on bail under very strict conditions, which
include that you can only leave your residence if accompanied by a
surety, and you have to self-finance a GPS monitoring system, which
costs around $2,000 per month.
TARACHANSKY: Also among the speakers was Matthew Behrens, the coordinator of the Campaign to Stop Secret Trials.
MATTHEW
BEHRENS, COORDINATOR, CAMPAIGN TO STOP SECRET TRIALS: A couple of years
ago, there was a report that was issued by something called the
International Commission of Jurists, which is the leading judges on the
planet. And this report, which came out in 2008, explored the use of
so-called counter-terrorism measures and the effects that they have had
on human rights and the human rights regime which was set up to prevent
these kinds of crimes after the Second World War. And in addition to
their many findings--the most disappointing of which for them was it's
not just dictatorships that are taking advantage of the war on terror,
it's in fact liberal democracies such as Canada, the UK, France, and the
United States which have taken the lead in eroding, consciously, human
rights protections.
TARACHANSKY: Gary Botting is a Canadian
lawyer and legal expert on extradition. He is the author of several
books on the issue, including Canadian Extradition Law Practice.
GARY
BOTTING, LAWYER, AUTHOR: The Hassan Diab case is very unique in terms
of the extradition process that has been followed so far. Usually
extradition--an extradition hearing would take two days. Now, if the
decision to allow the individual to call evidence is upheld, then things
will begin to change. Then we'll have longer hearings. And right now
the Hassan Diab case is almost--well, it stands alone among all the
cases that I've heard in the past ten years, where the individual has
been able to [inaudible] evidence and challenge the evidence in a major
way. That's a big shift.
TARACHANSKY: In Diab's record of
the case, it was revealed that the French prosecutor targeted him based
on German and Israeli intelligence.
TFAILY: You later know
that no one involved in your case knows the source or even the
reliability of the intelligence against you, not the Crown prosecutors,
not the Canadian judge, and not even the French investigators
themselves, as they admit in one of the court documents.
TARACHANSKY:
Beside the secret intelligence, the case hinges on a handwriting
sample. However, the record of the case reveals that when the suspect's
handwriting was compared, the comparison was made to handwriting that
wasn't Hassan's. After a lengthy legal fight, Diab's lawyer was able to
assemble a team of international experts in handwriting analysis, who
concluded multiple times that Hassan's handwriting does not match the
suspect's.
TFAILY: You also learn that the French
investigators knew, more than a year ago, that your fingertip prints
don't match those left by the suspect. Again, this was never disclosed
to you or to the court.~~~TARACHANSKY: It seems like evidence is used here that wouldn't be accepted in a Canadian court.BOTTING:
Yeah, definitely that's the case. The legal and political environments
are almost like two cogs in a wheel. First of all, he must go before a
judge, who determines whether the allegations in the foreign country
amount to an offense in the country that has requested to extradite him.
So that's the first step. The other concentric circle, if you like, or
cog, is the minister of justice makes the ultimate decision, the
political decision, as to whether or not to actually extradite the
individual. So judges in Canada have very little power. Now it's only
a--almost a rubber-stamping at the judicial level, and then it goes to
the minister of justice.~~~BEHRENS: And just
to give you a sense of the extradition cases that come before the
Canadian justice minister, in 1999, Queen's Bench Justice Steel wrote,
quote, evidence at an extradition hearing should be accepted even if the
judge feels it is manifestly unreliable, incomplete, false, misleading,
contradictory of other evidence, or the judges feel the witness may
have perjured themselves. So essentially you're being punished even if
you're completely innocent of those charges. You can spend years in
jail. You get to France, you get to Britain. And even if you do have a
fair trial and you do win, how much of your life is gone?~~~BOTTING:
Because Canada's a common-law country, we always send back people to
face the music, back in the country they came from or where the offense
is alleged to have been committed, whereas that's not necessarily
reciprocated. Certainly, France does not reciprocate.TARACHANSKY: Why would Canada do that?BOTTING:
Precisely. Why would Canada do that? We as lawyers have been asking
that question for a long time. But Canada is in a position where it
always wants to kowtow to larger or more established nations. And so it
becomes a question of not will we jump, but how high will we jump, and
how much do we have to bend over backwards to accommodate. In fact,
never in the history of Canada have we prosecuted in Canada rather than
sending people back to face prosecution in a foreign country. That's
another huge hurdle that the Hassan Diab case can make, a huge advance
this case could represent, if indeed Canada decides not to send him back
to France.~~~TARACHANSKY: In March, the
Ontario judge will decide whether the evidence in the case is reliable.
If he decides it's not, Hassan Diab will be dismissed. However,
according to Gary Botting, the attorney general will likely appeal the
case all the way up to the Supreme Court.
End of Transcript
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