Tamil migrants may walk free following Canadian Govt plans to drop secret hearings
January 16th, 2010 - 1:11 pm ICT by ANIVancouver, Jan. 16 (ANI): The Canadian Government has abandoned its earlier plan to launch secret hearings to argue for the continued detention of 25 Tamil migrants.
The Globe and Mail quoted a government lawyer as saying that Ottawa will no longer argue for the continued incarceration of the migrant men, who arrived on a freighter last October claiming they were refugees fleeing post-war Sri Lanka.
A spokeswoman for the Immigration and Refugee Board confirmed that the applications were withdrawn.
The development means that all 76 of the Tamil boat people could be freed in the coming weeks.
Some of the migrants’ lawyers, whose clients faced the secret hearings, said they were thrilled to learn that the Tamil men will finally be released from custody.
But they questioned why the government launched the expensive, time-consuming hearings in the first place.
“They goofed. These guys [migrants] have been painted and tarred guilty and now we have an 11th-hour hiccup [from the government],” said lawyer Robert Blanshay, who represents six migrants facing Section 86 hearings.
From the outset, the government has argued that it believes that some of the men are linked to the LTTE, a separatist group that had waged a 25-year civil war with the Sri Lankan government.
The migrants were all incarcerated in a Vancouver-area detention centre.
In December, the government had announced that it would proceed with the Section 86 hearings against 25 of the men, and unlike ordinary detention hearings, these sessions are closed to the public, to the migrants involved and to their lawyers, and the evidence given is secret. (ANI)
- Tamil migrant claims of routine death threats in homeland and harrowing time in Canada - Jan 05, 2010
- Canada to deport Tamil migrant over past links with LTTE - Mar 09, 2011
- Canadian Government to discuss ways to halt Lankan Tamil migrant rush - Sep 14, 2010
- Sri Lankan Tamil held in Canada for war crimes - Nov 04, 2010
- Detained Sri Lankans may be Tamil Tigers fleeing to Canada: Expert - Nov 12, 2009
- Canada seizes ship with illegal Tamil migrants - Aug 13, 2010
- Lankan Tamils still under Canadian detention due to documents mix-up - Aug 19, 2010
- Canadian Navy boards Tamil refugee ship, some expected to be LTTE members - Aug 13, 2010
- Rajapaksa arrives at Shimla - Jun 10, 2010
- Canada hints LTTE behind human-smuggling ship - Aug 14, 2010
- Sri Lankan refugees return from India - Oct 12, 2011
- Over 100 Tamil migrants heading to Canada arrested - Oct 30, 2010
- Rajapaksa's re-election may help him bring about settlement with ethnic minorities, says Krishna - Feb 04, 2010
- Hollywood actor, wife flee into Canada, seek asylum - Oct 23, 2010
- Tamil delegation from Sri Lanka meets S M Krishna in New Delhi - Jul 08, 2010
Tags: 11th hour, canadian government, canadian govt, freighter, globe and mail, government lawyer, hiccup, immigration and refugee, immigration and refugee board, incarceration, ltte, migrants, outset, post war, section 86, separatist group, spokeswoman, sri lankan government, tamil men, vancouver area